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Englander, Fred; Terregrossa, Ralph A.; Wang, Zhaobo – Educational Review, 2010
The purpose of this study is to analyze the relationship between the grade performance of 128 students in an introductory micro-economics course and the average number of hours per week these students report spending on the Internet. The literature review offers a "priori" arguments supporting both positive and negative relationships.…
Descriptors: College Students, Academic Achievement, Internet, Computer Uses in Education
Santicola, Craig F. – ProQuest LLC, 2011
There is a lack of student learning and critical thinking skills in post-secondary macroeconomics courses. The literature indicates that the lack of learning outcomes can be attributed to the reliance on traditional lecture and the failure to adopt innovative instructional techniques. The purpose of this study was to investigate the student…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Macroeconomics, Critical Thinking, Learning
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Miller, Jon R.; Baker-Eveleth, Lori – American Journal of Business Education, 2010
The rising cost of college textbooks over the last decade provides an opportunity for alternatives. Electronic or online textbooks are an effective substitute to the traditional paper-based textbooks, although students have been slow to transition to the new method. A custom, professor-written online textbook not only addresses the reduction in…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Electronic Publishing, Economics Education, Costs
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Gori, Federica – Language Learning in Higher Education, 2014
Projects related to the European Language Portfolio (ELP) carried out at the Language Centre of the University of Trieste are concerned to examine whether and to what extent "can do" descriptors can be extended to courses in Languages for Specific Purposes. The project reported in this article had two aims. The first was to explore what…
Descriptors: Languages for Special Purposes, Guidelines, Language Proficiency, Second Language Learning
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Lindsey-Taliefero, Debby; Kelly, Lynne; Brent, William; Price, Russell – American Journal of Business Education, 2011
This article evaluates a financial literacy curriculum at the Howard University (HU) School of Business, by measuring the financial knowledge acquired after participating in a variety of programs. To evaluate the HU curriculum, the National Jump$tart Coalition (NJC) survey was administered to collect data on financial knowledge and demographic…
Descriptors: Money Management, Curriculum, African American Students, Business Administration Education
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Wu, Xiaoyu; Gao, Yuan – American Journal of Business Education, 2011
This paper applies the extended technology acceptance model (exTAM) in information systems research to the use of clickers in student learning. The technology acceptance model (TAM) posits that perceived ease of use and perceived usefulness of technology influence users' attitudes toward using and intention to use technology. Research subsequent…
Descriptors: Audience Response Systems, Computer Attitudes, Technology Uses in Education, Educational Technology
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Verhoeven, Penny; Wakeling, Victor – American Journal of Business Education, 2011
In a study conducted at a large public university, the authors assessed, for an upper-division quantitative methods business core course, the impact of delivery method (online versus face-toface) on the success rate (percentage of enrolled students earning a grade of A, B, or C in the course). The success rate of the 161 online students was 55.3%,…
Descriptors: Public Colleges, College Students, Research Methodology, Courses
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Hoag, John H.; Browne, M. Neil – College Student Journal, 2009
An introductory course is the discipline's handshake; it is the greeting that either seals the deal or in varying degrees convinces the learner that this discipline has little usefulness. Given the huge stakes in forming a strategy for the introductory course, how should we structure the course? The argument in this paper is that we should…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Intellectual Disciplines, Thinking Skills, College Faculty
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Kennedy, Peter; Bisping, Timothy O.; Patron, Hilde; Roskelley, Kenneth – Journal of Economic Education, 2008
The authors explore academic misconduct in various forms and consider the role of student perceptions. They gather data from students in introductory economics courses regarding 31 types of misconduct. They estimate the relevance of various determinants of misconduct, acknowledging that they may vary across misconduct type and that students'…
Descriptors: Student Behavior, Student Attitudes, Ethics, Cheating
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Andreopoulos, Giuliana Campanelli; Panayides, Alexandros – American Journal of Business Education, 2009
Economics is usually perceived as a difficult subject among undergraduate students with negative repercussions on their performance. The literature suggests that the students' problems with principles of economics are mainly related to the style and method of teaching together with the course content. Particularly attacked are the chalk and talk…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Teaching Methods, Grade Point Average, Introductory Courses
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Stokes, Anthony; Wilson, Edgar – American Journal of Business Education, 2009
There have been many national and international reports expressing concern about the problems of teaching economics subjects in universities and colleges. This paper puts forward one approach to deal with the issue through the use of a computer based learning program designed to cater for the differences in backgrounds and learning styles of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Economics Education, College Instruction, Computer Assisted Instruction
Navarrete-Alvarez, Esteban; Rosales-Moreno, Maria Jesus; Huete-Morales, Maria Dolores – Online Submission, 2010
Statistics teaching should not be carried out in the same way for all kinds of university students. Instead, teaching statistics should take into account the different fields of study that students have chosen. For example, students of sciences or engineering have different interests and backgrounds compared to students of any social or juridical…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Statistics, Labor, Teaching Methods
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Ghosh, Sucharita; Renna, Francesco – Journal of Economic Education, 2009
College instructors and students participated in a pilot project at the University of Akron to enhance student learning through the use of a common teaching pedagogy, peer instruction. The teaching pedagogy was supported by the use of technology, an electronic personal response system, which recorded student responses. The authors report their…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Technology Uses in Education, Feedback (Response), Pilot Projects
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Lagerlof, Johan N. M.; Seltzer, Andrew J. – Journal of Economic Education, 2009
The authors examined the effects of remedial mathematics on performance in university-level economics courses using a natural experiment. They studied exam results prior and subsequent to the implementation of a remedial mathematics course that was compulsory for a subset of students and unavailable for the others, controlling for background…
Descriptors: Secondary School Mathematics, Remedial Mathematics, Economics Education, Transfer of Training
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Johnson, Daniel K. N. – Journal of College Teaching & Learning, 2007
Visualization through the use of physical objects is an important method that instructors can use to convey and solidify an understanding of economic principles in their novice students of economics. This paper outlines three simple examples which have been successful in the classroom, each taking a question that students frequently ask--why we…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Money Management, Visualization, Models
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