Reviews for PLCY630

Information Review
Mark Croatti
PLCY630

Expecting an A
Anonymous
11/05/2024
With Professor Croatti's guidance my reform paper was published in the graduate student journal and then because of that, it helped me earn a promotion at my part-time job. He is a professor who cares not only about what we write but how we write it, how we support our ideas and the quality of the sources that we use. He constantly offered advice on how to sharpen my paper's focus and making sure that all of the parameters for each stage were followed to the letter, even if it meant evening Zoom sessions instead of in-person meetings, which I appreciated his setting aside the time for. I had not learned how to cite to the level he insisted on until this course and although it wasn't easy, I am glad that I use this type of professional formatting because I want to write for a living and I believe that the skills I've acquired in this course will be invaluable.
Mark Croatti
PLCY630

Anonymous
08/31/2024
This is graduate school. For graduate students, not freshmen. The course is advertised as a discussion-based public policy seminar, not a lecture-style symposium. The written assignments are called memos in the syllabus, not term papers. Yet, the memos are actually multiple, term paper-length assignments.
Mark Croatti
PLCY630

Expecting an A-
Anonymous
08/29/2024
Who assigns multiple papers with deadlines only weeks apart in graduate school? It takes time and energy and thought to put these things together. And what's the point of having to meet with your teams every single week of the semester if the team presentation isn't until the very end? The use of groups for so many different tasks seemed unusual. We had to meet every class for a few minutes to talk about the readings scheduled for that day as if we hadn't done them yet. I don't know any other course I've taken were group activities took up so much time. The presentations that groups give at the end can be planned within minutes, there is no need to spend so much time during the semester on a project that is worth such a small percentage of the grade.
Mark Croatti
PLCY630

Expecting an A
Anonymous
08/29/2024
ok I've had worse overall instructors but the biggest gripe by far that I had with this guy​ was the absolute insistence on using Chicago-style formatting to the point of obsession. Why only them? Why not MLA or Little Brown Reader or any one of a number of equivalent styles? Doesn't he think we've learned professional formatting at this stage of our academic careers? Chicago-style in the syllabus, Chicago-style on Blackboard, endless links to Chicago-style, more announcements about Chicago-style, constant reminders about Chicago-style, I got it, we all got it, enough is enough! Chicago-style is not the only formatting style out there and I don't understand why any of the others can't be used, it was so endless so repetitive it got to the point where I wondered if I had to use Chicago-style just to send him an email. Written assignments should be graded on content, the argument, answering all of the parts that he demands and less insistence on narrow rules and overbearing requirements and all of the other annoying aspects that he harps on when this was supposed to be a straight forward class on policy formation. If the course had more flexibility I think a lot of the people that gave him such a hard time would have been more cooperative. Speaking for myself, I have always flourished when my professors gave me the ability to be creative and didn't interfere with my writing style, let alone encapsulate the assignments within rigid boundaries. It is such a relief to be done with this class.
Mark Croatti
PLCY630

Expecting an A-
Anonymous
08/28/2024
A very restricted definition of what is "scholarly". The allowable Internet sources are like 1% of what's available online. No office hours except late at night after class.
Mark Croatti
PLCY630

Expecting an A
Anonymous
08/28/2024
He is an adjunct who is rarely assigned to an in-person class but he had been teaching 630 on campus for someone on leave who has now returned, thank God!
Mark Croatti
PLCY630

Expecting a B
Anonymous
08/27/2024
multiple assignments every week that take the whole semester to complete. one after another, extremely time consuming. had not taken a class like this before.
Mark Croatti
PLCY630

Expecting a B+
Anonymous
08/27/2024
An exhausting class. I don't know if anyone got an A.
Mark Croatti
PLCY630

Expecting an A
Anonymous
08/03/2024
Mark Croatti was finally let go by UMD after what was the worst class I have ever endured in a University. Mark has absolutely zero knowledge or wisdom on anything related to public policy and taught this class with the intention of fueling his ego and hearing his own voice. It was pathethic listening to him berate students projects in front of the class and talk over them while they defended themselves. His grading criteria made no sense, not even to Judy, the UMD librarian who was meant to help us with the project who glumly said she has never seen such criteria. He graded arbitratily, with no consistency, rhyme, or reason between grades given to students. He also insulted students with accomodations and said “they do not apply to his class.” It is a shame UMD even allowed this man to finish the semester. He should not be allowed to teach.
Mark Croatti
PLCY630

Expecting an A
Anonymous
07/16/2024
Professor Croatti assigns a standard three-part major policy progression paper: 1) What's the problem and why, 2) Who the stakeholders are on both sides, and 3) What should be done based on based practices at home and abroad. His PowerPoint lectures are a mix of textbook chapters, online readings, and case studies, with Zoom guest speakers ranging from current and former legislators to foreign and domestic lobbyists (including a woman who is trying to get raw milk legalized at the state and national level). Classes often consists of him taking a small portion of time to walk us through a number of preparatory, smaller assignments leading up to the major paper including obstacles, common mistakes, and tips for improvement based on our individual progress (I found this very helpful). His PowerPoint slides are intended to provoke policy discussions for and against particular courses of action. Real issues in the news are invoked to demonstrate how a contemporary policy originated. He offers extra credit for voluntary briefings at embassies and international organizations like the European Union to hear how policies are created in other countries as well as their ideas for addressing American problems. While the large size of the class meant that not all of us got to ask a question at every class, he makes himself available on Zoom and before and after class. He's a published writer, having written on Forever Chemicals and the Maryland State Pension system, so his writing advice certainly has credibility but I think it would have been nice to have a full sample paper on Canvas for each stage of the assignment and I also would have liked actual guest speakers and not always just people on Zoom) but overall, I really enjoyed this course and learned a great deal!
Mark Croatti
PLCY630

Expecting an A-
Anonymous
05/28/2024
Professor Croatti assigns a standard three-part major policy progression paper: 1) What's the problem and why it's a problem (including a "two-way progression" style of cause and effect, 2) Who the stakeholders are on both sides, for and against, and 3) What policy would make incremental or even major progress based on based practices at home and abroad. His PowerPoint lectures are a mix of textbook readings, online readings, and case studies from his own experience, with Zoom guest speakers ranging from current and former legislators and foreign and domestic lobbyists, including a woman who is trying to get raw milk legalized at the state and national level. Classes often consists of him taking a small portion of time to walk us through a number of preparatory, smaller assignments leading up to the major paper including real time discussions regarding similar obstacles, common mistakes, and tips for improvement, based on each student's individual progress (I found this very helpful). His PowerPoint slides are intended to provoke policy discussions for and against particular courses of action and many times real issues in the news are invoked to demonstrate how a contemporary policy originated. He even offers extra credit by taking students on voluntary trips to embassies and international organizations like the European Union, where diplomats provide briefings on how their country's policies were generated. I had never been to a foreign embassy before so I found it fascinating to hear how policies are created in other countries as well as their ideas for addressing American problems (he brings his undergraduates, too). While the size of the class (25 students, which is big for a graduate course) meant that not all of us got to ask a question at every class, he makes himself available on Zoom and before and after class to make sure we know how to approach the major policy paper. He's a published writer, having written on Forever Chemicals and the Maryland State Pension system, so his writing advice certainly has credibility but I think it would have been nice to have a full sample paper on Canvas for each stage of the assignment and I also would have liked actual guest speakers and not always just people on Zoom, although I understand traveling to College Park is not easy for everyone (although it would have been nice) but overall, I really enjoyed this course and learned a great deal!
Mark Croatti
PLCY630

Expecting an A
Anonymous
10/25/2023
Taking this course with this professor is one of my biggest regrets in life. The classes are 2.5 hours of him either doing rambling on about nothing for no reason such as the evolution of milk. Or he will spend the entire class grading our assignments in front of the entire class. We have spent multiple classes having him go to each one of us and ask us to show him our assignments and he grades them in front of everyone. So during this time everyone in the class not being graded must sit there and listen to him ramble about each of our assignments. He won't even allow us to use our computers to make something productive happen during class. We have spent maybe 20% of our classes going over anything slightly related to policy. Most of our time is spent watching him grade because his grading things at home would be asking too much. This is not even the worst part of his class, the worst part is his criteria on assignments and citations. I am in grade school I know what is a scholarly source and what isn't but he adds 18 more specifics on what can and can't be used. He has a vendetta against all online publications and refuses to accept the fact that if something isn't printed it can still be accurate. This is all made worse by his constant reminders that he is a great writer and that he is teaching us the only proper way to write. All the master's students must sit there and listen to him talk about our poor writing skills.