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Showing 1 to 15 of 236 results Save | Export
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Carlos J. Asarta – Journal of Economic Education, 2024
Faculty often report limited student engagement in their economics courses. This deficiency makes it challenging for educators to excite students about our field, a situation that could have ripple effects in terms of the number of students who graduate as economics majors. For students, the lack of classroom engagement makes it unappealing to…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Economics Education, Majors (Students), Outcomes of Education
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Mary Lopez; Kirsten Wandschneider – Journal of Economic Education, 2024
The authors of this article demonstrate best practices for creating belonging in economics, which allows diverse students to feel respected and accepted within the discipline. Opportunities to connect with economics allow students to understand and be empowered by the value they add to the classroom. The suggested practices thus include providing…
Descriptors: Sense of Community, Inclusion, Teaching Methods, Beginning Teachers
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Gary A. Hoover; Ebonya Washington – Journal of Economic Education, 2024
Economics has a well-documented problem with diversity. Literacy-targeted (LT) courses designed for a broader spectrum of students have the potential to help address the underrepresentation of women and racial/ethnic minorities in the discipline. The authors of this article explore how, by using the LT approach, introductory economics instructors…
Descriptors: Student Interests, Economics Education, Diversity, Inclusion
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Avi J. Cohen – Journal of Economic Education, 2024
Using the backward design model, the author of this article surveys and connects the economic competencies literature evolving from Hansen with the literature on literacy-targeted principles courses. He makes the case why departments should offer LT principles courses--which focus on higher-level mastery of a shorter list of concepts that students…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Teaching Methods, Mastery Learning, Nonmajors
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Cortés, Darwin; Mantilla, César; Prada, Laura – Journal of Economic Education, 2023
The authors adapted a lab-in-the-field experiment emulating the dynamic extraction of a fishery to create a Web-based classroom experiment. The game includes a multi-player version analogous to an open-access problem and a single-player version analogous to the social planner problem. This game is helpful in introductory microeconomics courses to…
Descriptors: Web Based Instruction, Teaching Methods, Elective Courses, Animal Husbandry
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Luedtke, Allison Oldham – Journal of Economic Education, 2023
The author describes an assignment in an undergraduate game theory course in which students work together in class to develop a computer algorithm to identify Nash equilibria. This assignment builds basic computer science skills while applying game theory knowledge to real-world situations. Students work as a team to delineate the steps and write…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Game Theory, Programming Languages, Assignments
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Ayadi, M. Femi; Onodipe, Grace – Journal of Economic Education, 2023
Incorporating writing into an economics course is a beneficial goal of economic educators. The potential benefits of using writing to enhance learning among economics students have been emphasized in the literature. Writing to Learn (WTL) is an act of using writing activities to help students think through key concepts presented in a course. The…
Descriptors: Learning Strategies, Learner Engagement, Peer Teaching, Economics Education
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Filson, Darren – Journal of Economic Education, 2023
The COVID-19 pandemic made it necessary for instructors to innovate, and some of the innovations will persist and be refined post-pandemic. An economics elective at Claremont McKenna College provides examples. Innovations likely to persist include replacing in-class exams with context-rich assignments and conducting a set of student presentations…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Educational Innovation, Economics Education
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Bhanot, Syon – Journal of Economic Education, 2023
The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted the status quo across higher education, including in the domain of pedagogy. The author of this article provides a case study of the changes made to one course, "Behavioral Economics," at Swarthmore College, in response to a set of unique, pandemic-related challenges. He begins by providing details on…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Case Studies, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Jacobson, Sarah – Journal of Economic Education, 2023
The economic theory of natural resource exploitation predicts that scarcity crises will not arise because forward-looking resource owners will smooth their extraction over time to maximize their profits. The model providing this result can seem opaque and technical to students, but its intuition can be learned from experience. The author shares a…
Descriptors: Natural Resources, Game Based Learning, Mining, Role Playing
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Chaudhury, Parama – Journal of Economic Education, 2023
In this article, the author describes the use of a storytelling approach in a learning design with significant asynchronous elements. This approach was introduced in an upper-level international trade course with close to 200 students in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. As most live "lectures" took place online and were subject to…
Descriptors: Asynchronous Communication, Instructional Design, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Castro Santa, Juana – Journal of Economic Education, 2023
A novel game that captures the central dimensions of climate change mitigation as a social dilemma is presented. Students play the role of countries sharing a global atmosphere. In each round, carbon emissions are released and accumulated in the atmosphere, making climate change consequences more severe and difficult to mitigate over time. Without…
Descriptors: Climate, Change, Environmental Education, Game Based Learning
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Haugen, Atle; Juranek, Steffen – Journal of Economic Education, 2023
The authors present two classroom experiments on technology licensing. The first classroom experiment introduces the concept of royalty stacking. Students learn that noncooperative pricing of royalties for complementary intellectual property rights leads to a double-marginalization effect. Cooperation solves the problem and is welfare-improving.…
Descriptors: Masters Programs, Graduate Students, Intellectual Property, Educational Experiments
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Cameron, Michael P. – Journal of Economic Education, 2023
Media bias is an important and underexplored feature of the economics of information. In this article, the author outlines two models that can be used to illustrate media bias in a policy-oriented undergraduate economics or public policy course. The models rely on relatively simple and intuitive underlying assumptions and draw on related empirical…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Undergraduate Students, Mathematical Models, Competition
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Ong, EeCheng; Wong, Timothy – Journal of Economic Education, 2023
The authors incorporate experiential learning into three courses: Urban Economics, Labor Economics, and the Economics of Inequality. Students visit neighborhoods that, while geographically proximate, remain outside most students' day-to-day experiences, such as a legal red-light district that is also home to low-wage immigrant workers and a public…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Neighborhoods, Field Trips
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