30337 - POLICY EVALUATION
Department of Social and Political Sciences
GIOVANNI ABBIATI
Suggested background knowledge
PREREQUISITES
Mission & Content Summary
MISSION
CONTENT SUMMARY
- Review of descriptive statistics and the Ordinary Least Squares regression.
- Correlation and causation.
- The ideal experiment: the potential outcomes model, treatment effects, and the selection problem.
- Randomized controlled trials.
- Natural experiments.
- Experiments with imperfect compliance and Instrumental Variable.
- Regression discontinuity designs.
- Exploiting variation over time: Panel, difference-in-differences, and synthetic control methods.
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILO)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Recognize interesting research questions.
- Reproduce empirical analyses.
APPLYING KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Develop a research design.
- Analyze data.
Teaching methods
- Face-to-face lectures
- Exercises (exercises, database, software etc.)
- Group assignments
DETAILS
Students work in group on practical examples using the econometric software STATA.
Assessment methods
Continuous assessment | Partial exams | General exam | |
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ATTENDING STUDENTS
The final grade is based on written final exam, group problem sets, and group presentation.
- Problem sets: groups consisting of 3-4 students would be formed at the beginning of the course. This grouping is valid for both the group problem sets and the group presentation.
- Group presentation: each group would present a research project proposal at the end of the course. The presentation format is an open seminar (about 20 min) with Q&As from other fellow students and instructors. A separate instruction for the presentation is provided.
The final grade is determined as the maximum between:
- The weighted average of the final written exam (60%), average grade in all problem sets (20%), and group presentation (20%).
- Using this rule, problem sets and group presentations provide an insurance against having a bad day on the exam day.
NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
The final grade is just grade received in the final exam.
Teaching materials
ATTENDING AND NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
All the material relevant for the final exam is covered in the slides used in class, which is posted on Bboard. Slides and your own notes should be your main reference, for this reason attendance in class is strongly recommended (though not imposed, see below for more on this). Below there is a list of additional reading materials. Neither the books nor the papers constitute material for the exam. You are, however, strongly encouraged to read them (skimming through the technical details), as the exam consists in interpreting the results of empirical analyses similar to those presented therein – though not the same ones.
- Books:
- J. ANGRIST, J.S. PISCHKE, Mastering Metrics, Princeton University Press, 2014.
- J.H. STOCK, M.W. WATSON, Introduction to Econometrics, Pearson, 2015.