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Adams, Erin C. – Citizenship, Social and Economics Education, 2019
This article examines the theoretical assumptions underlying K-12 economic curriculum and the consequences of this curriculum for citizenship education and democracy. Specifically, the article discusses scholarship related to the critique of neoclassic economic theory's role in influencing the "Voluntary National Content Standards in…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Citizenship Education, Democracy, Economics Education
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Dyshaeva, Lyudmila – Bulgarian Comparative Education Society, 2015
The article discusses the shortcomings of the methodology of neoclassical theory as a basic theory determining the content of contemporary economic theory course at Russian educational institutions namely unrealistic conditions of perfect competition, rationality of economic behavior of business entities, completeness and authenticity of…
Descriptors: Theories, Economics Education, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
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Zinkina, Julia; Korotayev, Andrey – Journal for Multicultural Education, 2014
Purpose: The aim of this paper is to investigate whether the structure of the international migration system has remained stable through the recent turbulent changes in the world system. Design/methodology/approach: The methodology draws on the social network analysis framework--but with some noteworthy limitations stipulated by the specifics of…
Descriptors: Immigration, Evidence, Social Change, Social Networks
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Kwok, Yun-kwong – Journal of Economic Education, 2007
In the neoclassical growth theory, higher saving rate gives rise to higher output per capita. However, in the Keynesian model, higher saving rate causes lower consumption, which may lead to a recession. Students may ask, "Should we save or should we consume?" In most of the macroeconomics textbooks, economic growth and Keynesian economics are in…
Descriptors: Financial Policy, Economics Education, Undergraduate Study, Theories
Sorensen, Aage B. – 1977
This paper analyzes the properties of the process of social and economic attainments in two contrasting situations: (1) when the process of attainment generates the distribution of attainments, and (2) when the structure of attainments is seen as exogenously determined. It is argued that the neoclassical economic theory of earnings determination…
Descriptors: Aspiration, Educational Background, Educational Status Comparison, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)
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Anker, Richard – International Labour Review, 1997
Reviews theoretical explanations for gender segregation in occupations: neoclassical, human capital, institutional and labor market segmentation, and gender discrimination. Determines that gender discrimination theories are most compelling, given the enormous overlap in abilities and preferences of individual men and women. (SK)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Labor Needs, Labor Supply, Occupational Segregation
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Leff, Michael C., Ed. – Western Journal of Speech Communication, 1980
The seven articles in this journal issue survey and assess the art of rhetorical criticism based on evidence derived from critical practice. The first five articles analyze the literature subsumed with certain approaches to rhetorical criticism and are arranged in the chronological order of the emergence of the approach: neo-classical criticism,…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Discourse Analysis, Rhetorical Criticism, Speech Communication
Howley, Craig B. – Journal of Rural and Small Schools, 1992
Compares and contrasts two economic views, political economy and neoclassical economics, as they pertain to the development of human capital and education in rural areas. The concluding discussion draws implications for rural educators. (Author/KS)
Descriptors: Economic Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Human Capital, Labor Market
Ball, Terence; Dagger, Richard – Political Science Teacher, 1990
Maintains that, in order to understand the current debate over liberalism, a historical perspective on the subject is necessary. Traces the history of liberalism from its inception in the Reformation to the present conflict between neoclassical liberalism and welfare liberalism. Focuses on the major theorists of liberalism. (RW)
Descriptors: Democratic Values, Government Role, Intellectual History, Liberalism
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Ricker, Eric W. – Journal of Educational Thought, 1980
Until the 1950s, Canadian economists demonstrated little concern about the relationship between education and society's economic performance. In the 1960s, the neoclassical school became preoccupied with education's investment potential and, with the Keynsians, formed a consensus on greatly increased expenditures. In the 1970s, this judgment was…
Descriptors: Economics, Educational Finance, Educational Policy, Elementary Secondary Education
Nelson, Julie A. – 1997
This essay examines the ways in which economics, as a discipline, has been influenced by feminist scholarship in the field. It explains that feminist work in transforming economics began to gain ground only in the early 1990s, and that the impact of feminist or multicultural insights on the core research assumptions of the discipline has been…
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Capitalism, College Curriculum, College Instruction