The Science of Political Science Graduate Admissions
Gary King, John Bruce, Michael Gilligan. 1993.
"The Science of Political Science Graduate Admissions".
PS: Political Science and Politics, XXVI, Pp. 772–778.

Abstract
As political scientists, we spend much time teaching and doing scholarly research, and more time than we may wish to remember on university committees. However, just as many of us believe that teaching and research are not fundamentally different activities, we also need not use fundamentally different standards of inference when studying government, policy, and politics than when participating in the governance of departments and universities. In this article, we describe our attempts to bring somewhat more systematic methods to the process and policies of graduate admissions.
See Also
- [Paper] A Proposed Standard for the Scholarly Citation of Quantitative Data (2007)
- [Software] Booc.Io: An Education System With Hierarchical Concept Maps (2017)
- [Paper] Education and Scholarship by Video (2021)
- [Paper] Ensuring the Data Rich Future of the Social Sciences (2011)
- [Paper] How Human Subjects Research Rules Mislead You and Your University, and What to Do About It (2016)
- [Paper] How Social Science Research Can Improve Teaching (2013)
- [Patent] Instructional Support Platform for Interactive Learning Platforms (2019)
- [Patent] Instructional Support Platform for Interactive Learning Platforms (2nd) (2020)