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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 121 to 135 of 1,313 results
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Balkenborg, Dieter; Kaplan, Todd; Miller, Timothy – Journal of Economic Education, 2011
Once relegated to cinema or history lectures, bank runs have become a modern phenomenon that captures the interest of students. In this article, the authors explain a simple classroom experiment based on the Diamond-Dybvig model (1983) to demonstrate how a bank run--a seemingly irrational event--can occur rationally. They then present possible…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Experiments, Economics Education, Banking
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Calafiore, Pablo; Damianov, Damian S. – Journal of Economic Education, 2011
This article studies the determinants of academic achievement in online courses in economics and finance. The authors use the online tracking feature in Blackboard (Campus Edition) to retrieve the real time that each student spent in the course for the entire semester and to analyze the impact of time spent online, prior grade point average (GPA),…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Economics Education, Academic Achievement, Time on Task
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Carson, Nancy; Tsigaris, Panagiotis – Journal of Economic Education, 2011
The authors develop a new classroom experimental game to illustrate environmental issues by using the production-possibility frontier in an introductory economics course. Waste evolves as a byproduct of the production of widgets. Environmental cleanup is produced by reallocating scarce resources away from the production of the dirty good. In…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Experiments, Class Activities, Educational Games
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Beckman, Steven; Chen, Lanxin; DeAngelo, Greg; Smith, W. James; Zhang, Xieting – Journal of Economic Education, 2011
Psychologists such as the Nobel Prize-winner Daniel Kahneman challenge the major assumptions of microeconomics: the rational pursuit of self-interest given unchanging tastes. One may explore these issues through a questionnaire that may be distributed in class. How many of your students behave as the psychologists predict? Should economists adapt…
Descriptors: Microeconomics, Psychology, Questionnaires, Economics Education
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Siegfried, John J. – Journal of Economic Education, 2011
The trend in U.S. undergraduate economics degrees continued its upward trajectory in 2009-2010. After three years of treading water (2005, 2006, and 2007), in 2008 (academic year 2007-2008) undergraduate degrees in economics awarded by U.S. colleges and universities resumed the strong upward trajectory they exhibited from 1997 through 2004, when…
Descriptors: Private Colleges, Economics Education, Public Colleges, Bachelors Degrees
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Walstad, William B.; Salemi, Michael K. – Journal of Economic Education, 2011
The Teaching Innovations Program (TIP) was a six-year project funded by the National Science Foundation that gave economics instructors the opportunity to learn interactive teaching strategies for use in undergraduate economics courses. TIP participants first attended a teaching workshop that presented various teaching strategies. They then could…
Descriptors: Program Descriptions, Electronic Learning, Economics Education, Workshops
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Watts, Michael; Schaur, Georg – Journal of Economic Education, 2011
Surveys in 1995, 2000, 2005, and 2010 investigated teaching and assessment methods in different undergraduate courses. In this article, the authors offer basic results from the 2010 survey. "Chalk and talk" remains the dominant teaching style, but there were drops in mean (although not median) values for those pedagogies and some growth in the use…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Undergraduate Study, Teaching Methods, Evaluation Methods
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Graves, Philip E.; Sexton, Robert L.; Calimeris, Lauren M. – Journal of Economic Education, 2011
The surprise value of many economic observations makes the economics discipline quite interesting for many students. One such anomaly is that providing "free" education in an effort to reduce the number of dropouts can often result in a lower level of educational quality purchased. This result is easy to show with indifference curves, but many…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Economics Education, Supply and Demand, School Choice
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Mumford, Kevin J.; Ohland, Matthew W. – Journal of Economic Education, 2011
Using undergraduate student records from six large public universities from 1990 to 2003, the authors analyze the characteristics and performance of students by major in two economics courses: Principles of Microeconomics and Intermediate Microeconomics. This article documents important differences across students by major in the principles course…
Descriptors: Student Records, Majors (Students), Undergraduate Students, Universities
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Parker, Jeffrey – Journal of Economic Education, 2010
The author investigates how ability and gender affect grades on homework projects performed by assigned pairs of students in an undergraduate macroeconomics course. The assignment grade is found to depend on the ability of both students, and the relative importance of the stronger and weaker student differs in predictable ways depending on the…
Descriptors: Homework, Economics Education, Gender Differences, Cooperative Learning
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Leet, Don R.; Lang, Nancy A. – Journal of Economic Education, 2010
The authors analyze the economic opinions of teachers and economists from the former Soviet Union who participated in economic education programs sponsored by the U.S. Department of Education under the auspices of the National Council on Economic Education from 1995-2001. They sought to determine the level of consensus on economic topics among the…
Descriptors: Opinions, Economics, Social Scientists, Teacher Attitudes
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Chen, Frederick H. – Journal of Economic Education, 2010
The author presents a simple geometric method to graphically illustrate the expected utility from a gamble with more than two possible outcomes. This geometric result gives economics students a simple visual aid for studying expected utility theory and enables them to analyze a richer set of decision problems under uncertainty compared to what…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Microeconomics, Teaching Methods, College Instruction
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Schaur, Georg; Watts, Michael – Journal of Economic Education, 2010
Little research in economic education has dealt with MBA programs. The authors investigated student performance in a microeconomics/managerial economics course taught in a one-year MBA program at the German International School of Management and Administration in Hanover, Germany, during the 2002-5 academic years. After controlling for other…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Research, Higher Education, Economics Education
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Wade, Bruce H.; Stone, Jack H. – Journal of Economic Education, 2010
The authors describe an interdisciplinary course team-taught by an economist and a sociologist. Historically mindful of the less than amicable relationship between these disciplines, these colleagues developed a course that attempted to illuminate the different perspectives of economics and sociology in relation to selected health themes. Such a…
Descriptors: Course Content, Sociology, Barriers, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Wells, Graeme – Journal of Economic Education, 2010
The author analyzes the inflation-targeting model that underlies recent textbook expositions of the aggregate demand-aggregate supply approach used in introductory courses in macroeconomics. He shows how numerical simulations of a model with inflation inertia can be used as a tool to help students understand adjustments in response to demand and…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Computer Simulation, Macroeconomics, Economic Climate
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