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California Report Card

The California Report Card (CRC) is a mobile-optimized web application designed to promote public involvement in the California government.[1] Developed by Prof. Ken Goldberg and the CITRIS Data and Democracy Initiative at UC Berkeley with California Lt. Governor Gavin Newsom, version 1.0 was released in January 2014.[2] On the CRC site, participants are encouraged to grade California on a scale from A+ to F on six timely topics and to propose their own suggestions of issues that merit attention at the state level.[3] The CRC is a form of E-democracy, structuring and streamlining communication from the California residents to their elected officials.

California Report Card
CRC Main Page
Available inEnglish, Spanish
Created byCITRIS Data and Democracy Initiative
URLcaliforniareportcard.org
Launched28 January 2014; 10 years ago (2014-01-28)

History edit

The CRC builds on aspects of two earlier programs: Opinion Space and the World Bank's Citizen Report Card.[3]

Opinion Space, developed at UC Berkeley between 2009 and 2011, is a social media technology developed to assist communities in exchanging ideas and opinions concerning current issues and policies. From 2010 to 2014, the US State Department used a version of Opinion Space to solicit suggestions on foreign policy from participants around the world.[4] The CRC augments the Opinion Space platform, and applies its techniques of deliberative polling, collaborative filtering and multidimensional visualization. The CRC moves Opinion Space to a mobile-optimized platform and builds on the original system by adding a citizen report card.[5]

The World Bank first developed “citizen report cards” in Bangalore, India in 1993.[6] These report cards work to stimulate public feedback on government actions and prompt individuals to express their opinions and ideas. The report cards allow for participants to assess the ideas of others and bring popular suggestions to the attention of elected leaders. The goals of the CRC are quite similar to those of the Citizen Report Cards.

Gavin Newsom's first book, Citizenville: How to Take the Town Square Digital and Reinvent Government, published in 2013, argues for the value of projects like the CRC.[7] Citizenville contrasts the powerful and innovative role of technology in the lives of everyday citizens and the comparatively traditional policies of the government. Newsom emphasizes the potential for technological growth and expansion in the California government.[8] Today's technology offers a plethora of ways to connect the public directly to the government. Citizenville stresses that modern technology should be utilized to foster and enhance political participation. Newsom played an active role in development of the CRC and worked closely with the team at UC Berkeley.[9] Newsom commented: “The California Report Card is a new way for me to keep an ear to the ground. This new app/website makes it easy for Californians to assign grades suggest pressing issues that merit our attention. In the first months, participants conveyed that they approve of our rollout of Obamacare but are very concerned about the future of California schools and universities. There was also statewide support for increased attention to Disaster Preparedness, so this has become one of my top priorities."[10]

The CRC is an application of the greater “CAFE” platform, an acronym for the Collective Assessment and Feedback Engine, and began development in earnest with the support of Newsom.[11] Professor of engineering and Faculty Director of the Data and Democracy Initiative Ken Goldberg leads the CAFE team at UC Berkeley. Separate applications of the same platform in areas such as disaster preparedness, measurement of online learning, and humanitarian interventions are in development.[11]

Features edit

Participants are first directed to grade the six current topics. The median grade is revealed as users enter their grades.[12] Participants then submit their zip codes and enter an online “café”. The page design draws on the metaphor of the café in which users can discuss their suggestions and opinions over a cup of coffee. Participants click on the mugs and read the ideas of other users, grading the importance and relevance of each suggestion.[2] After evaluating two other suggestions, participants are prompted to enter their own textual submissions.

Each mug represents a participant. The mugs are placed on the table using principal component analysis (PCA).[13] The sampling algorithm used to place mugs favors suggestions that have fewer votes, ensuring that each idea is sufficiently graded. The CRC system tracks the standard error of the grades for each mug, and places each suggestion strategically in an effort to equalize the standard error overall.[13]

Version 1.0 edit

The CRC's first version was released on January 28, 2014.[10] Version 1.0 included six issues for participants to grade within the following categories: Healthcare, Education, Marriage Equality, Immigrant Rights, and Marijuana Decriminalization.[14] As of June 2014, over 8,000 people from every county in California have assigned approximately 25,000 grades.[10] The data collected from version 1.0 of the CRC has been organized and posted on the official website. The next version will be released fall of 2014 and the CRC team plans to implement a Spanish version of the platform as well.[1]

Version 2.0 edit

Officially released on 23 September, National Voter Registration Day, Version 2.0 of the California Report Card is designed to engage the 30% of Californians who speak Spanish at home.[15] All content is now available in English and Spanish, with rapid translation of new input and a streamlined new graphic design.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Evans, Zenon. "Democratic Accountability Made as Simple as an App". Reason.com. Reason Foundation. Retrieved 15 July 2014.
  2. ^ a b Getuiza, Cheryl. "Californians grade the state with new report card app". CAFWD. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
  3. ^ a b Lucas, Scott. "Gavin Newsom and a Berkeley Professor Are Trying to Disrupt Public Opinion Polls". San Francisco Magazine. Modern Luxury. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
  4. ^ "Opinion Space". Opinion Space. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 2022-04-01. Retrieved 2017-01-13. Friday, 13 January 2017
  6. ^ "Citizen Report Card and Community Score Card". World Bank. The World Bank Group. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  7. ^ . Citizenville. Archived from the original on 2014-07-29. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  8. ^ Noveck, Beth. "Citizenville by Gavin Newsom". SFGate. Hearst Newspapers. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  9. ^ Martinez, Cheryl. "Announcing the California Report Card". Berkeley Research. UC Berkeley. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  10. ^ a b c Verhulst, Stefaan. "The California Report Card". GovLab. NYU. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
  11. ^ a b "CAFE (Collective Assessment and Feedback Engine)". Development Impact Lab. UC Berkeley. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  12. ^ Tuan, Lydia. "New Platform Allows California Residents to Grade State Performance". The Daily Californian. Independent Berkeley Student Publishing Co. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
  13. ^ a b Faridani, Siamak; Bitton, Ephrat; Ryokai, Kimiko; Goldberg, Ken. "Opinion Space: A Scalable Tool for Browsing Online Comments" (PDF). UC Berkeley School of Information. UC Berkeley. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
  14. ^ Brown, Steven. "Gavin Newsom, UC Berkeley team up on California Report Card". San Francisco Business Times. American City Business Journals. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
  15. ^ "Selected Social Characteristics in the United States". U.S. Census Bureau. Archived from the original on 17 September 2014. Retrieved 18 September 2014.

External links edit

  • The California Report Card 2014-06-14 at the Wayback Machine
  • "Let's Amplify California's Collective Intelligence"

california, report, card, mobile, optimized, application, designed, promote, public, involvement, california, government, developed, prof, goldberg, citris, data, democracy, initiative, berkeley, with, california, governor, gavin, newsom, version, released, ja. The California Report Card CRC is a mobile optimized web application designed to promote public involvement in the California government 1 Developed by Prof Ken Goldberg and the CITRIS Data and Democracy Initiative at UC Berkeley with California Lt Governor Gavin Newsom version 1 0 was released in January 2014 2 On the CRC site participants are encouraged to grade California on a scale from A to F on six timely topics and to propose their own suggestions of issues that merit attention at the state level 3 The CRC is a form of E democracy structuring and streamlining communication from the California residents to their elected officials California Report CardCRC Main PageAvailable inEnglish SpanishCreated byCITRIS Data and Democracy InitiativeURLcaliforniareportcard wbr orgLaunched28 January 2014 10 years ago 2014 01 28 Contents 1 History 2 Features 3 Version 1 0 4 Version 2 0 5 References 6 External linksHistory editThe CRC builds on aspects of two earlier programs Opinion Space and the World Bank s Citizen Report Card 3 Opinion Space developed at UC Berkeley between 2009 and 2011 is a social media technology developed to assist communities in exchanging ideas and opinions concerning current issues and policies From 2010 to 2014 the US State Department used a version of Opinion Space to solicit suggestions on foreign policy from participants around the world 4 The CRC augments the Opinion Space platform and applies its techniques of deliberative polling collaborative filtering and multidimensional visualization The CRC moves Opinion Space to a mobile optimized platform and builds on the original system by adding a citizen report card 5 The World Bank first developed citizen report cards in Bangalore India in 1993 6 These report cards work to stimulate public feedback on government actions and prompt individuals to express their opinions and ideas The report cards allow for participants to assess the ideas of others and bring popular suggestions to the attention of elected leaders The goals of the CRC are quite similar to those of the Citizen Report Cards Gavin Newsom s first book Citizenville How to Take the Town Square Digital and Reinvent Government published in 2013 argues for the value of projects like the CRC 7 Citizenville contrasts the powerful and innovative role of technology in the lives of everyday citizens and the comparatively traditional policies of the government Newsom emphasizes the potential for technological growth and expansion in the California government 8 Today s technology offers a plethora of ways to connect the public directly to the government Citizenville stresses that modern technology should be utilized to foster and enhance political participation Newsom played an active role in development of the CRC and worked closely with the team at UC Berkeley 9 Newsom commented The California Report Card is a new way for me to keep an ear to the ground This new app website makes it easy for Californians to assign grades suggest pressing issues that merit our attention In the first months participants conveyed that they approve of our rollout of Obamacare but are very concerned about the future of California schools and universities There was also statewide support for increased attention to Disaster Preparedness so this has become one of my top priorities 10 The CRC is an application of the greater CAFE platform an acronym for the Collective Assessment and Feedback Engine and began development in earnest with the support of Newsom 11 Professor of engineering and Faculty Director of the Data and Democracy Initiative Ken Goldberg leads the CAFE team at UC Berkeley Separate applications of the same platform in areas such as disaster preparedness measurement of online learning and humanitarian interventions are in development 11 Features editParticipants are first directed to grade the six current topics The median grade is revealed as users enter their grades 12 Participants then submit their zip codes and enter an online cafe The page design draws on the metaphor of the cafe in which users can discuss their suggestions and opinions over a cup of coffee Participants click on the mugs and read the ideas of other users grading the importance and relevance of each suggestion 2 After evaluating two other suggestions participants are prompted to enter their own textual submissions Each mug represents a participant The mugs are placed on the table using principal component analysis PCA 13 The sampling algorithm used to place mugs favors suggestions that have fewer votes ensuring that each idea is sufficiently graded The CRC system tracks the standard error of the grades for each mug and places each suggestion strategically in an effort to equalize the standard error overall 13 Version 1 0 editThe CRC s first version was released on January 28 2014 10 Version 1 0 included six issues for participants to grade within the following categories Healthcare Education Marriage Equality Immigrant Rights and Marijuana Decriminalization 14 As of June 2014 over 8 000 people from every county in California have assigned approximately 25 000 grades 10 The data collected from version 1 0 of the CRC has been organized and posted on the official website The next version will be released fall of 2014 and the CRC team plans to implement a Spanish version of the platform as well 1 Version 2 0 editOfficially released on 23 September National Voter Registration Day Version 2 0 of the California Report Card is designed to engage the 30 of Californians who speak Spanish at home 15 All content is now available in English and Spanish with rapid translation of new input and a streamlined new graphic design References edit a b Evans Zenon Democratic Accountability Made as Simple as an App Reason com Reason Foundation Retrieved 15 July 2014 a b Getuiza Cheryl Californians grade the state with new report card app CAFWD Retrieved 8 July 2014 a b Lucas Scott Gavin Newsom and a Berkeley Professor Are Trying to Disrupt Public Opinion Polls San Francisco Magazine Modern Luxury Retrieved 8 July 2014 Opinion Space Opinion Space Retrieved 23 June 2014 Old moscow mugs Archived from the original on 2022 04 01 Retrieved 2017 01 13 Friday 13 January 2017 Citizen Report Card and Community Score Card World Bank The World Bank Group Retrieved 23 June 2014 Citizenville Citizenville Archived from the original on 2014 07 29 Retrieved 23 June 2014 Noveck Beth Citizenville by Gavin Newsom SFGate Hearst Newspapers Retrieved 23 June 2014 Martinez Cheryl Announcing the California Report Card Berkeley Research UC Berkeley Retrieved 23 June 2014 a b c Verhulst Stefaan The California Report Card GovLab NYU Retrieved 8 July 2014 a b CAFE Collective Assessment and Feedback Engine Development Impact Lab UC Berkeley Retrieved 23 June 2014 Tuan Lydia New Platform Allows California Residents to Grade State Performance The Daily Californian Independent Berkeley Student Publishing Co Retrieved 8 July 2014 a b Faridani Siamak Bitton Ephrat Ryokai Kimiko Goldberg Ken Opinion Space A Scalable Tool for Browsing Online Comments PDF UC Berkeley School of Information UC Berkeley Retrieved 8 July 2014 Brown Steven Gavin Newsom UC Berkeley team up on California Report Card San Francisco Business Times American City Business Journals Retrieved 8 July 2014 Selected Social Characteristics in the United States U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on 17 September 2014 Retrieved 18 September 2014 External links editThe California Report Card Archived 2014 06 14 at the Wayback Machine Let s Amplify California s Collective Intelligence Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title California Report Card amp oldid 1184177062, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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