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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 3,958 results
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Talbot, Steve; Reeves, Alan; Johnston, James – Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education, 2014
An audit of economics provision shows that over the past decade economics has disappeared from large parts of the UK's higher education landscape, especially the post-1992 universities. In the north of Britain the binary system has effectively re-emerged leaving many potential students unable to study key subjects such as economics. Post-1992…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Economics Education, Undergraduate Students, Undergraduate Study
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Greenway, Gina A.; Makus, Larry D. – Natural Sciences Education, 2014
Online course offerings have been growing at a rapid pace in post-secondary education. An ordered probit model is estimated to analyze the effects of online vs. face-to-face course format in achieving specific letter grades. An upper-division agricultural economics course taught over 9 years using both formats is used for the analysis. For a…
Descriptors: Agricultural Education, Economics Education, Online Courses, Conventional Instruction
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Siegfried, John J.; Walstad, William B. – Journal of Economic Education, 2014
Survey results from a large sample of economics departments describe offerings for principles courses, coursework requirements for economics majors, and program augmentations such as capstone courses, senior seminars, and honors programs. Findings are reported for all institutions, and institutions are subdivided into six different categories…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Majors (Students), Required Courses, Degree Requirements
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Kassens, Alice Louise – Journal of Economic Education, 2014
Economics appears to be lagging behind other fields in the adoption of Web 2.0 technologies in the classroom. Twitter is an online microblogging utility, permitting posts of up to 140 characters called tweets. The utility is rapidly making its way into secondary and post-secondary classrooms as a complement to traditional instruction and an active…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Web 2.0 Technologies, Technology Uses in Education, Macroeconomics
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Chen, Qihui; Okediji, Tade O. – Journal of Economic Education, 2014
In this article, the authors illustrate how incentives can improve student performance in introductory economics courses. They implemented a policy experiment in a large introductory economics class in which they reminded students who scored below an announced cutoff score on the midterm exam about the risk of failing the course. The authors…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Introductory Courses, Incentives, Academic Achievement
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Main, Joyce B.; Ost, Ben – Journal of Economic Education, 2014
The authors apply a regression-discontinuity design to identify the causal impact of letter grades on student effort within a course, subsequent credit hours taken, and the probability of majoring in economics. Their methodology addresses key issues in identifying the causal impact of letter grades: correlation with unobservable factors, such as…
Descriptors: Grades (Scholastic), Course Selection (Students), Majors (Students), Student Behavior
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Petkus, Marie; Perry, John J.; Johnson, Bruce K. – Journal of Economic Education, 2014
In this article, the authors are the first to describe the core economics curriculum requirements for economics majors at all American colleges and universities, as opposed to a sample of institutions. Not surprisingly, principles of economics is nearly universally required and implemented as a two-semester course in 85 percent of economics major…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Majors (Students), Degree Requirements, Required Courses
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Buttet, Sebastien; Roy, Udayan – Journal of Economic Education, 2014
Several leading undergraduate intermediate macroeconomics textbooks now include a simple reduced-form New Keynesian model of short-run dynamics (alongside the IS-LM model). Unfortunately, there is no accompanying description of how the zero lower bound on nominal interest rates affects the model. In this article, the authors show how the…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Macroeconomics, Financial Policy, Models
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Arnold, Ivo J. M.; Rowaan, Wietske – Journal of Economic Education, 2014
In this study, the authors investigate the relationships among gender, math skills, motivation, and study success in economics and econometrics. They find that female students have stronger intrinsic motivation, yet lower study confidence than their male counterparts. They also find weak evidence for a gender gap over the entire first-year…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Economics Education, Success, Gender Differences
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Nieswiadomy, Michael – Journal of Economic Education, 2014
Using 1994-95, 2002-3, and 2008-9 data, the author found that economics majors scored well on the LSAT® (1998, 2006, 2010). These results are often posted on university economics (and other) department Web sites. The author, who updates the prior studies using current data for law school applicants for the 2012-13 class of students entering law…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Majors (Students), Standardized Tests, Law Schools
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Bosshardt, William; Walstad, William B. – Journal of Economic Education, 2014
The "National Standards for Financial Literacy" describe the knowledge, understanding, and skills that are important for students to learn about personal finance. They are designed to guide teachers, school administrators, and other educators in developing curriculum and educational materials for teaching financial literacy. In this…
Descriptors: National Standards, Financial Services, Money Management, Academic Standards
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O'Hara, Michael E. – Journal of Economic Education, 2014
Although the concept of the sampling distribution is at the core of much of what we do in econometrics, it is a concept that is often difficult for students to grasp. The thought process behind bootstrapping provides a way for students to conceptualize the sampling distribution in a way that is intuitive and visual. However, teaching students to…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Economics, Sampling, Statistical Inference
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List, John A. – Journal of Economic Education, 2014
In this article, the author explains why field experiments can improve what we teach and how we teach economics. Economists no longer operate as passive observers of economic phenomena. Instead, they participate actively in the research process by collecting data from field experiments to investigate the economics of everyday life. This change can…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Educational Change, Change Strategies, Teaching Methods
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Hodgson, Ashley – Journal of Economic Education, 2014
Adverse selection as it relates to health care policy will be a key economic issue in many upcoming elections. In this article, the author lays out a 30-minute classroom experiment designed for students to experience the kind of elevated prices and market collapse that can result from adverse selection in health insurance markets. The students…
Descriptors: Health Insurance, Economics Education, Class Activities, Experiments
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Murray, Michael P. – Journal of Economic Education, 2014
Individuals vary in their responses to incentives and opportunities. For example, additional education will affect one person differently than another. In recent years, econometricians have given increased attention to such heterogeneous responses and to the consequences of such responses for interpreting regression estimates, especially…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Graduate Study, Undergraduate Study, Responses
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