HUMAN RESOURCE ADMINISTRATION

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Course Syllabus Note: This syllabus may be revised during the life of the course HUMAN RESOURCE ADMINISTRATION Graduate Course in Public Administration, School of Public Service and Administration; Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, Newark Campus Course number: 20:834:523.03 Course Instructor: Yonel Pierre, PhD (yonelpierre10@gmail.com) Class meets: Monday 5:30-8:10 PM Location: ENG 209 Office hours by appointment only; please contact instructor at: 201-259-8318; or: yonelpierre10@gmail.com Location: Center for Urban and Public Service 111 Washington Street, Newark NJ; Office Room TBA Course Description and objectives: Human resource administration encompasses many intricate features of the management of people in the public workforce. It also comprises the many responsibilities of managers and administrators. This course is intended to explore and help students grasp the core issues involved in managing the personnel in the public sector. They will interactively survey real cases as guides to introduce them to some of the daily activities of public personnel management. They will also explore related concepts such as labor-management relation; public employee performance management and the incentive system; diversity management; Global personnel management; and many more. Through these investigations, they will better understand the challenges in managing the human aspect in the public workforce and how helpful improvements can be made. Students who have been engaged in public service as a profession may already have an adept knowledge of the topic. Nevertheless, they will develop a broader conceptual

and theoretical understanding of it. Those who are newly introduced to the topic are expected to acquire foundational knowledge of human resource administration, and be able to form their own opinions through the course. REQUIRED TEXTBOOKS: Riccucci, Norma M., Public Personnel Management: Current Concerns and Future Challenges, 2012, 5 th Edition; Routledge, 2 Park Square, Abingdon, 711 3 rd Ave, New York, NY 10017 Reeves, Zane, I. Cases in Public Human Resources Management, 2006, 2 nd Edition; Cengage Learning, Wadsworth, 20 Channel Center St., Boston, MA 02210 Any other reading materials, if necessary, (articles, chapters, and/or periodicals) will be posted on Blackboard. ATTENTION: Weekly assignments and required readings will be announced via Blackboard as just a reminder. EXPECTATIONS OF STUDENTS: Attend class on a regular basis; be punctual and participate in class discussions. Participation is 10% of the final grade. Unless you attend class, you cannot participate in class discussions. IN ADDITION All written assignments must be typed and double-spaced 12pt font, Times New Roman. When you use outside sources, you must cite the source properly using MLA format. All assignments must be submitted on time. Late assignments will only be accepted at the professor s discretion and will incur a reduction in grade. Code of Student Conduct: It is expected that all students will abide by the University s Code of Conduct. All members of the Rutgers University community are expected to behave in an ethical and moral fashion, respecting the human dignity of all members of the community and resisting behavior that may cause danger or harm to others through violence, theft, or bigotry. The primary responsibility for managing the classroom environment rests with the faculty. Students who engage in any prohibited or unlawful behavior that results in disruption of a class may be directed by the faculty member to leave the class for the remainder of the class period. The full policy is available for review at http://polcomp.rutgers.edu/judaff/ucsc.shtml.

Policy on Academic Integrity: Rutgers University is committed to upholding the highest standards of academic honesty. In this class, academic honesty means that you will write your own assignments. This does not mean that you and your classmates can't get together to share ideas and information about the paper assignments or to prepare for debates and presentations. In fact, we encourage you to form study groups for exactly this purpose. But ultimately, the writing assignments you turn in for class credit must be in your own words (with the exception of a limited number of direct quotations, which must be properly designated and cited). This means: You must specifically cite the sources of any facts (including statistics, tables, and graphs) that are not common knowledge; you must use quotation marks around all material from which you are quoting directly; and you must use footnotes or in-text references to cite all ideas and materials taken from other authors, including class readings and web pages. Be advised that Blackboard (the vehicle for submitting your work) is equipped for automatic detection of plagiarism. Be sure and consistent about citation formats; research the citation style if you are uncertain. Feel free to bring up questions in class so we can resolve them together. Academic dishonesty includes, but is not limited to, the following: Feigning illness to avoid handing in assignments; Submitting work under your name that was prepared by someone else; Copying text from books, articles, or the Internet without proper citation of the source; Giving a false or nonexistent citation. Students in this class and in all courses at Rutgers University are expected to uphold the highest standards of academic integrity. You are expected to be familiar with this policy. If you have questions about specific assignments, be sure to check with the instructor. Plagiarism is the representation of the words or ideas of another as one's own in any academic exercise. To avoid plagiarism, every direct quotation must be identified by quotation marks or by appropriate indentation and must be properly cited in the text or in a footnote. Acknowledgment is required when material from another source stored in print, electronic or other medium is paraphrased or summarized in whole or in part in one's own words. The trust between the instructor and the class depends on your acceptance of this essential principle of behavior in the University in terms of academic integrity. Finally, please don't jeopardize your opinion of yourself or your academic career by either copying someone else's work or allowing someone to copy your work. This includes both homework and exams. Do your own work and do not provide unauthorized assistance to others and you will find this course more rewarding. The Policy on Academic Integrity requires that all members of the community report suspected violations. Students should make reports to the instructor of the class while instructors should report suspected violations to the Judicial Officer of the College in which the student is enrolled. If students from several Colleges are involved in the possible violation, the report should be made to the University Director of Student Judicial Affairs who will assign the investigation to one of the College Judicial Officers. Adjudication of suspected violations falls under the procedural requirements of the Code of Student Conduct.

Special Accommodations All services, programs, and activities at the University are accessible to students with disabilities. If you have a disability that interferes in any way with your potential for success in this course, please inform me during the first week of class, so any special arrangements can be made. To receive special services, you must be registered with the Center for Students with Disabilities. Class Cancellations: In the event of the need for the instructor to cancel class, the instructor will post an announcement on Blackboard, which will also be emailed to your Rutgers email account at least 24 hours in advance of class. Syllabus Content and Schedule Changes The syllabus schedule and content may change at the discretion of the instructor. Such changes will be clearly announced in class and posted to Blackboard. Student Resources: School of Public Affairs and Administration http://spaa.newark.rutgers.edu/ Rutgers University Libraries http://www.libraries.rutgers.edu/ Log in from anywhere for complete access with your Net ID and password. Need a library PIN number to request articles or books check account, renew books online etc. Career Development Center, Newark http://cdc.newark.rutgers.edu/ Assist Rutgers- Newark students and alumni in matters pertaining to their career and life planning including identification of their competitive skills, investigation and exploration of academic and/or professional area interests, and attaining a greater understanding of the world of work. Rutgers-Newark Writing Center http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~nwc/ The Writing Center offers tutoring and workshops to Undergraduate and Graduate students currently enrolled at the Rutgers-Newark campus. Tutor-Trac http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~nwc/tutortrac.html TutorTrac is a web application that provides a convenient way for you to: book and cancel appointments from any computer, reserve material from our lending library, download Writing Center and Learning Center documents that have been uploaded to your account Learning Center http://lc.newark.rutgers.edu/index.php located at 110 Warren Street, Bradley Hall Room 140, Newark, (973) 353-5608 Health Services http://health.newark.rutgers.edu/ GRADING SYSTEM: Class participation: 10%; 2 Quizzes: 10% each; Mid-term paper: 20%; Final research paper: 40%; Class presentation of final research project 10% Note: The assigned dates for each assignment will also be posted on blackboard and communicated during class. Mid-term and final research assignments will be explained. Students must email each assignment to the instructor and hand in a hard copy as well. Students must select one assigned chapter to either outline or synopsize in one (1) page to submit to the instructor for every class until the end of the semester.

Weekly Topics, Readings, and Assignments: Week 1, 1/23/17: Review of syllabus and general overview of the course Week 2, 1/30/17: History of Public human resource management in the United States Riccucci: CHs 1, 4 Reeves: cases # 1, 5 & 12 Week 3, 2/6/17: The 4 facets of (HRM) human resources management - Riccucci, CHs 2, 11 Reeves: cases # 3, 19 & 20 Week 4, 2/13/17: The challenges of HRM - Past and current challenges Riccucci, CHs 3, 6 & 7, 15 Reeves, cases # 7, 20 & 25 & 28 Week 5, 2/20/17: Quiz I Week 6, 2/27/17: Overcoming the challenges of HRM Riccucci, CHs 10, 11, 12, 13 & 17 Reeves, cases #11, 13 & 18 Week 7, 3/6/17: Purposes of HRM Riccucci, CHs 8, 9, 14 & 15 Students inputs necessary Week 8, 3/20/17: Future Challenges Riccucci, CHs 3, 6 & 5 Reeves, 14 & 28 Mid-Term paper due (8-10 double space pages minimum) Week 9, 3/27/17: Quiz II Week 10, 4/3/17: Guest speaker (TBA) (Reading assignment will be posted) Week 11, 4/10/17: Research presentations Week 12, 4/17/17: Research Presentations Week 13, 4/24/17: Research presentations Week 14, 5/1/15: Research Presentations

N.B.: Students are allowed to bring a public service manger or administrator to copresent part of their topics for half the time of their presentation if necessary. A list of topics to research for the mid-term and final project will be suggested. However, students are responsible to select their own topic and may use their discretions. Week 15, Review session Week 16, 5/8/17: Final Research paper due on May 10, 17 @ 11: pm (10-12 doubles space pages minimum) via email to the instructor.