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Showing 151 to 165 of 269 results Save | Export
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Ghosh, Satyajit; Ghosh, Sarah – Journal of College Teaching & Learning, 2007
Principle of duality and numerical calculation of income and substitution effects under Hicksian Compensation are often left out of intermediate microeconomics courses because they require a rigorous calculus based analysis. But these topics are critically important for understanding consumer behavior. In this paper we use excel solver--a…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Microeconomics, Consumer Economics, Calculus
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Buchan, Janet F.; Swann, Michael – Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 2007
The in house development of an online assessment tool, OASIS, has provided a unique opportunity to research the use of online assessment in teaching and learning across the university. The developing relationship between IT staff, educational designers and academics serves as a model for integrated and evolving management systems which demonstrate…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Models, Universities, Foreign Countries
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Pyne, Derek – Journal of Economic Education, 2007
The author examines the effects of different introductory microeconomics textbooks on student performance in subsequent economics courses (specifically, Intermediate Microeconomics I and Money and Banking). In some cases, the effects are significant and sizeable. There is also evidence of other variables affecting student performance in later…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Microeconomics, Economics Education, Introductory Courses
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Wang, X. Henry; Yang, Bill Z. – Journal of Economic Education, 2001
Attempts to clarify the concepts of, and the link between, fixed costs and sunk costs. Argues that the root of confusion is the inconsistency in defining the term fixed costs. Consistently defines fixed and sunk costs, and describes how instructors must teach under these definitions. (RLH)
Descriptors: Costs, Economics Education, Higher Education, Microeconomics
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Anderton, Charles H.; Carter, John R. – Journal of Economic Education, 2006
The authors show how microeconomic concepts and principles are applicable to the study of terrorism. The utility maximization model provides insights into both terrorist resource allocation choices and government counterterrorism efforts, and basic game theory helps characterize the strategic interdependencies among terrorists and governments.…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Microeconomics, Terrorism, Models
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Fuller, Dan; Geide-Stevenson, Doris – Journal of Economic Education, 2003
Explores consensus among economists on specific propositions on the basis of a fall 2000 survey of American Economic Association members. Finds consensus generally within the profession, although the degree of consensus varies among propositions that are international, macroeconomic, and microeconomic in nature. States the profession displays…
Descriptors: Economics, Economics Education, Higher Education, Macroeconomics
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Kara, Orhan; Bagheri, Fathollah; Tolin, Thomas – American Journal of Business Education, 2009
Factors affecting students' grades in principles of microeconomics and macroeconomics students are analyzed from the data collected in two public universities. Results indicate that gender, number of hours worked, SAT scores, number of missed classes, recommending the course to a friend, instructors, being a junior, number of economics courses…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Educational Principles, Performance Factors, Grades (Scholastic)
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Grant, Darren – Economics of Education Review, 2007
We determine how much observed student performance in microeconomics principles can be attributed, inferentially, to three kinds of student academic "productivity," the instructor, demographics, and unmeasurables. The empirical approach utilizes an ordered probit model that relates student performance in micro to grades in prior…
Descriptors: Microeconomics, Grades (Scholastic), Grading, Academic Achievement
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Liu, Liqun; Rettenmaier, Andrew J. – Journal of Economic Education, 2005
The excess burden of taxation typically has two graphical representations in undergraduate microeconomics and public finance textbooks: the IC/BC (indifference curve/budget constraint) representation and the demand/supply representation. The IC/BC representation has the advantage of showing the behavioral response to a distortionary tax and how a…
Descriptors: Microeconomics, Economics Education, Taxes, Undergraduate Study
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Halteman, James – Journal of Economic Education, 2005
In intermediate microeconomic textbooks the reciprocal nature of externalities is presented using numerical examples of costs and benefits. This treatment of the Coase theorem obscures the fact that externality costs and benefits are best understood as being on a continuum where costs vary with the degree of intensity of the externality. When…
Descriptors: Microeconomics, Theories, Economics Education, Undergraduate Study
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Bhadra, Laura Jean – Inquiry, 2006
This author delineates an alternative to traditional textbook teaching of economics: using contemporary films to bring concepts and practices to life. (Contains 5 notes.)
Descriptors: Films, Economics Education, Cognitive Style, Teaching Methods
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Von Allmen, Peter – Journal of Education for Business, 1996
Data from 99 students who completed a microeconomics course indicated that better grades in calculus led to significantly better grades in microeconomics. Higher levels of prior achievement as shown by grade point average correlated with better microeconomics performance. (SK)
Descriptors: Calculus, Economics Education, Higher Education, Microeconomics
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Mixon, Franklin G.; Salter, Sean P.; Withers, Michael C. – Journal of Education for Business, 2006
As professional athletes are traded from team to team, various in-kind and monetary transactions for certain jersey numbers are becoming more common. Given the size of some of the recent payments, these stories have transitioned from relative obscurity to mainstream sports news. In this article, the authors provide two areas where these kinds of…
Descriptors: Microeconomics, Learning Experience, Athletes, Human Capital
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Hey, John D. – Journal of Economic Education, 2005
Most people learn to drive without knowing how the engine works. In a similar vein, the author believes that students can learn economics without knowing the algebra and calculus underlying the results. If instructors follow the philosophy of other economics courses in using graphs to illustrate the results, and draw the graphs accurately, then…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Microeconomics, Computer Software, Graphs
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Rosen, Harvey S. – National Tax Journal, 1997
Comparison of a contemporary public finance textbook with one written in the 1940s indicates the following major changes in the field: microeconomic theory is now the framework for analyzing positive and normative issues; research is dominated by econometrics; and topical coverage has changed along with changes in public policy. (JOW)
Descriptors: Econometrics, Economics Education, Higher Education, Microeconomics
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