Part A
Part B
Part C
Part D
100

Name and define the theories of motivation

Theory X - workers hate work; need to micromanage 

Theory Y - workers are committed to the work; accept responsibility 

100

What is a policy?

A deliberate, stable system of guidelines to guide decisions and solve problems or deal with a matter of concern

100

What is a null hypothesis (H0)?

a statement that there is no effect or no relationship between the variables being studied

100

What is NCGS 159?

Local Government Budget and Fiscal Control Act

200

What are the principles of management?

(POSDCoRB) Planning, Organizing, Staffing, Directing, Coordinating, Reporting, and Budgeting

200

What is the iron triangle?

A mutually beneficial relationship between legislators, bureaucrats, and interest groups

200

What are the key differences in experimental and non-experimental research designs?

random assignment / no random assignment

manipulation of independent variable / no manipulation

high internal validity / low internal validity

200

What are the four budget systems?

(1) Line-item

(2) Performance

(3) Planned Program

(4) Zero-based

300

What is the politics administration dichotomy?

the concept of keeping politics out of public administration

300

Name and define the three policy types

(1) Distributive - Allocation of resources to a majority of the population at the expense of all taxpayers 

(2) Redistributive - Allocation of resources from one group to another so that everyone can enjoy a minimal standard of living 

(3) Regulatory - Policy that imposes restrictions on behaviors and actions through laws and regulations 

300

What is the difference between a conceptual variable and an operational variable?

conceptual - what you mean (trust in the government)

operational - what you measure (on a scale from 1-5 how much do you trust the government)

300

What are the three types of funds?

(1) Governmental

(2) Proprietary

(3) Fiduciary/Trustee

400

What are Weber's Characteristics of Bureaucracy? 

(1) Division of labor

(2) Hierarchy of authority

(3) Formal rules and regulations

(4) Impersonality

(5) Employment based on technical qualifications

(6) Formal written records

400
What are the stages of the traditional policy process?

(0) Problem Identification + Definition

(1) Agenda Setting

(2) Formulation

(3) Adoption

(4) Implementation

(5) Evaluation + Analysis

400

What is measurement reliability and how do you know if a measure is reliable?

the consistency of the measurement instrument; comparing results after testing several times under the same conditions

400

What are the four steps of the budget cycle?

(1) Executive Preparation

(2) Legislative Consideration

(3) Execution

(4) Audit and Evaluation

500

Name and define the MPA values

accountability - accepting responsibility 

responsiveness - responsive to needs and desires of the public

equity - equitable distribution of public services

ethics - adhering to ethical principles and values

excellence - high standards for programs

efficiency - high quality services for the lowest cost

effectiveness - programs should do what they are intended to do

500

What stage of the policy process is most important and why?

no wrong answer

500
Define internal and external validity.

Internal - whether or not the independent variable caused the outcome

External - whether or not the measure could be generalized beyond the study

500

Name the functions of the public budget.

(1) A tool for tracking expenditures and revenues

(2) An instrument of legislative control over the executive branch

(3) An opportunity to make taxing and spending decisions aimed at regulating economic demands providing strategic planning and control

(4) A technique for allocating resources among competing programs

(5) A record of past performance and a plan for future action