30152 - PUBLIC MANAGEMENT
Department of Social and Political Sciences
VALENTINA MELE
Suggested background knowledge
Mission & Content Summary
MISSION
CONTENT SUMMARY
Trends and context:
- Governments and globalization, Public Management and Governance
- Public and private management: What’s the difference?
- Decision making in public sector
- Strategy and financial management in the public sector
- Performance measurement and management
- Business-Government relationships: public affairs and lobbying, corporate citizenship, public private partnersips.
- The role and functions of International Organizations and Non Governmental Organizations (NGOs).
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILO)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Recognize the main functions of government and the different levels of government.
- Explain the public role of the private sector.
- Recognize the interactions between companies and government and between companies and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs).
- Understand the managerial challenges of International and Non-Governmental Organizations.
- Appreciate challenges in performance measurement applied to the public sector
APPLYING KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Design a public communication campaign (e.g., stop smoking).
- Analyze the regulatory impacts on companies and design a responsible public affairs strategy.
- Interpret a cost-benefit analysis for a public decision (e.g., investment in health).
- Formulate a performance assessment for public organizations.
- Plan and present a partnership between a company and a nongovernmental organization.
Teaching methods
- Lectures
- Guest speaker's talks (in class or in distance)
- Collaborative Works / Assignments
- Interaction/Gamification
DETAILS
- Guest speakers engage in interactive sessions with students aimed at sharing the professional challenges and opportunities of working for or with public organizations.
- Interactive class activities enable students to develop skills such as designing a public campaign or a lobbying strategy.
- Each year, attending students work in groups as consultants for a real client, which could be a government organization, a nongovernmental organization, or a company working with the public sector.
Assessment methods
Continuous assessment | Partial exams | General exam | |
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ATTENDING STUDENTS
The grade breakdown for attending students is as follows:
a) Exam
b) Active class participation
c) Groupwork
a) Two partial exams (Mid-term and final, respectively).
Both exams are held in written form and are composed of closed and open-ended questions referring to the concepts, models, and cases discussed in class and one short 'business case', which must be solved by students. The open-ended questions are mainly aimed at verifying learning of analytical and management abilities and their correct comprehension. The business case is based on the skills developed through in-class interactive learning, and it is used to assess the ability to apply the knowledge students acquire during the course critically.
OR General exam. This exam will have the same form and background materials as the first and second partial exams described above.
b) Active participation: For students attending in person (continuous assessment).
c) Groupwork Consulting
Students work in groups as consultants for a real client. The specific goals are presented in detail at the launch of the consulting project, along with the assessment criteria.
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The status of 'attending' is granted to students who participate in the group work. Students who decide to be attending are in charge of checking the instructions, forming their groups, and respecting the deadlines. No exceptions are allowed.
Attending student status is valid only until February 2025. Afterwards, the exam is for non-attending students only.
Please check the Syllabus and Blackboard to get further details.
NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
The assessment method for non-attending students is based on a final exam in written form. It is composed of closed and open-ended questions referring to the concepts presented in the textbook for non-attending students.
The open-ended questions are aimed at verifying learning and correct comprehension of the functioning dynamics and managerial tools of public organizations.
They are based on the entire textbook (all chapters). When preparing for the non-attending exam, you don't need to read or study slides and class-notes.
Please check the Syllabus and Blackboard to get details and, in due time, a mock exam for non-attending students.
Teaching materials
ATTENDING STUDENTS
All materials indicated in the Syllabus (readings, slides, cases, incidents..) and made available on Blackboard/online course reserve.
NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
- O.E. HUGHES, Public Management and Administration, Macmillan Education UK, 5th edition. PLS CONSIDER THAT WE DRAFT OUR QUESTIONS BASED ON THIS EDITION OF THE TEXTBOOK.