2001
DOI: 10.1111/0022-3816.00082
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Zen and the Art of Policy Analysis: A Response to Nielsen and Wolf

Abstract: We thank George A. Krause and Jeff Gill for helpful comments. All statistical analyses were conducted in STATA and replicated in limdep. All data and documentation to replicate this analysis including the complete STATA output can be found at http://web.polmeth.ufl.edu/ or www-bushschool.tamu.edu/pubman/ Zen and the Art of Policy Analysis: A Response to Nielsen and Wolf AbstractNeilsen and Wolf (N.d.) lodge several criticism of Meier, Wrinkle and Polinard (1999).Although most of the criticisms deal with tangen… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…In providing a theoretical rationale for a positive relationship between bureaucracy and school performance, and finding supporting empirical evidence, our argument is ultimately a logical extension of the theoretical perspectives of Meier (1994, 1995) and Meier et al (2001). We do not claim to have comprehensively contradicted public choice broadly, nor Chubb and Moe's (1990) neo-institutional framework specifically.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 51%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In providing a theoretical rationale for a positive relationship between bureaucracy and school performance, and finding supporting empirical evidence, our argument is ultimately a logical extension of the theoretical perspectives of Meier (1994, 1995) and Meier et al (2001). We do not claim to have comprehensively contradicted public choice broadly, nor Chubb and Moe's (1990) neo-institutional framework specifically.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 51%
“…Of particular concern are serial autocorrelation and heteroscedasticity. There are a number of alternative estimation techniques to handle these problems, which have been discussed and adopted to varying degrees by others who have used this data set to model school performance (Bohte 2001;Meier, Polinard, and Wrinkle 1999;Meier et al 2001;Nielsen and Wolf 2001). The primary issue in pooled analysis is efficiency rather than bias; accordingly, we focused on making the hypothesis tests associated with each coefficient as reliable and conservative as possible (see below for specifics).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Minority students are less likely to be tracked into low status classes, more likely to be assigned to advanced and gifted classes, less likely to be disproportionately disciplined, more likely to pass standardized tests, more likely to not drop out and to graduate from high school, and more likely to score higher on college board exams when they are exposed to minority teachers (see Meier and Stewart 1991;Meier, Stewart, and England 1989;Meier, Wrinkle, and Polinard 1999;Meier et al 2001;Polinard et al 1994). They are associated with fewer minority administrators being hired which in turn results in fewer minority teachers in the classroom.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A long literature has linked the election of minorities to governing boards to the subsequent recruitment of minorities to the bureaucracy (Eisinger 1980; Kerr and Mladenka 1994; Mladenka 1989; Polinard et al 1994). Although some condemn such practices as patronage and detrimental to the performance of school systems (Rich 1996), an extensive literature suggests that access to administrative and teaching positions results in policy outcomes that are likely to benefit minority students (Meier et al 2001; Meier and Stewart, 1991; Meier, Stewart, and England 1989; Meier, Wrinkle, and Polinard 1999; Polinard et al 1994).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An extensive literature shows that both African American and Latino teachers positively influence the educational experience of minority students. Minority students are less likely to be tracked into low status classes, more likely to be assigned to advanced and gifted classes, less likely to be disproportionately disciplined, more likely to pass standardized tests, more likely to not drop out and to graduate from high school, and more likely to score higher on college board exams when they are exposed to minority teachers (see Meier and Stewart 1991; Meier, Stewart, and England 1989; Meier, Wrinkle, and Polinard 1999; Meier et al 2001; Polinard et al 1994). The biases of election structure, therefore, are likely to reverberate through the entire education system and create additional biases in terms of gaining access to quality education.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%