MySearchLab provides students with a complete understanding of the research process so they can complete research projects confidently and efficiently. Students and instructors with an internet connection can visit www.MySearchLab.com and receive immediate access to thousands of full articles from the EBSCO ContentSelect database. In addition, MySearchLab offers extensive content on the research process itself-including tips on how to navigate and maximize time in the campus library, a step-by-step guide on writing a research paper, and instructions on how to finish an academic assignment with endnotes and bibliography.- "Shafritz, Russell, and Borick cover the most important issues in public administration with a witty writing style and examples drawn from different disciplines and modern culture. This approach will captivate students and encourage them to think critically about the nature of public administration today. " "Introducing Public Administration" provides students with a solid, conceptual foundation in public administration, and contains the latest information on important trends in the discipline. To further engage students and deepen interest in its narrative, the text uses unique chapter-opening vignettes called "Keynotes," chapter ending case studies, and a series of boxes throughout that offer real-life excerpts and alternative theories.
Very informative. Great basics for Public Administration. Organized well. Learned many different cultural reasons why some things are the way they are today.
My issue with the book is no matter the time of day I fell asleep after a few pages. There was so much in each chapter to remember. The chapter sometime ran up to 40+ pages. Not like fiction reading where you can get sucked in and not realize how long the chapter was. This was slogging through rice paddies at times.
What turned it around for me was adding background noise. Football or music. Reading went much faster and I stayed awake.
Three stars because it did its job in a manner that didn't engage me until the end.
This is horrible scholarship by someone who, by writing an introductory textbook for an entire discipline, should be an expert.
Incredible amount of bias, silly (and inaccurate) metaphors, arduous, and overall a terrible read. Ironically, in one of my other MPA classes, we are discussing how public administration has not always been taken seriously as a distinct field. This book serves up a good argument for that!
Wow, I'm not even 20 pages in and the authors have already made fun of Ayn Rand and libertarianism. This is going to be a Really annoying text book to read. Great.
Yup, hated it. Only consolation is that I didn't read much of it. Pbbbbbt!
Very good introductory book for public administration students. Took me awhile to get into it, but once you become accustomed to their style of writing it's very good.
This was dated (2009) so they had no clue what was going to happen to our government post-2016, but as a textbook it was pretty good. I actually had some LOL moments, but that could just be me being weird. They really like Woodrow Wilson a lot and don't really mention his efforts to deny women the vote. I thought that was strange for a book published in 2009.
Hated this book. Incredibly biased, ignorant and poorly written - I wanted to take an ice pick to my eyeballs for being forced to read it, and thankful that I was able to get away with not reading much of it.