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William Bosshardt – Journal of Economic Education, 2024
In the early 1940s, Black artist Jacob Lawrence painted a series of 60 panels that are now collectively called "The Migration Series." The panels tell the story of how Black Americans migrated from the South to the North, beginning with World War I. The panels provide an uncommon example of the intersection of economics, Black American…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Art, Diversity, African Americans
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Staples, Aaron J.; Sackett-Taylor, Hillary M.; Forgue, Jason; Brewer, Stephanie B.; Sarnikar, Supriya – Journal of Economic Education, 2020
Students of introductory economics are often able to predict changes in equilibrium price correctly on standardized assessments, but make consistent errors in predicting changes in equilibrium quantity. To examine the reasons for this pattern, the authors collected open-ended explanations written by students and categorized their reasoning using a…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Error Patterns, Logical Thinking, Supply and Demand
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Dewi, Retno Mustika; Sholikhah, Ni'matush; Fitrayati, Dhiah – International Journal of Instruction, 2020
Microeconomics course is a course relating to individual problems in meeting needs. So that require students' evaluation sheets which has high-level thinking ability standards that correlate with real life problems. The objectives of this study are (1) describing the feasibility of developing questions about Demand and Supply on the Economic…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Test Construction, Measures (Individuals), Microeconomics
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Ng, Chen Feng – Journal of Economic Education, 2019
In this article, the author describes the structure and content of a video game that she developed for a hybrid principles of microeconomics course that consists of two 50-minute lectures and a 50-minute online portion per week. The game comprises seven modules, each of which was assigned to be played during the course of the semester for the…
Descriptors: Microeconomics, Economics Education, Video Games, Instructional Materials
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Cutler, David M. – Journal of Economic Education, 2017
Health care is one of the economy's biggest industries, so it is natural that the health care industry should play some role in the teaching of introductory economics. There are many ways that health care can appear in such a context: in the teaching of microeconomics, as a macroeconomic issue, to learn about social welfare, and even to learn how…
Descriptors: Health Care Costs, Health Services, Economics Education, Microeconomics
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Wohlgemuth, Darin – Strategic Enrollment Management Quarterly, 2013
This article presents an applied research framework that can be helpful in tuition and net price policy discussions. It is the classic microeconomic concept of market demand applied to enrollment management in higher education. The policy relevance includes measuring a response to price. For example, the results of this model will allow the…
Descriptors: Tuition, Enrollment Management, Strategic Planning, Higher Education
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Beaulier, Scott A.; Prychitko, David L. – Journal of Economic Education, 2010
The Edgeworth exchange diagram is a traditional tool of undergraduate microeconomic theory that depicts the mutually beneficial gains from voluntary trade. The authors take the analysis one step further. They identify the buyer's and seller's surpluses that accrue to both trading parties in the Edgeworth diagram. This is a straightforward exercise…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Undergraduate Study, Microeconomics, Models
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Carroll, David – Journal of Institutional Research, 2011
The existence of an inverse relationship between wage levels and regional unemployment rates, commonly referred to as the wage curve, is well established in the economic literature and was described by Card (1995) as being "close to an empirical law of economics". This microeconomic wage-unemployment relationship, first identified by…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Graduates, Unemployment, Salary Wage Differentials
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Park, Andreas – Journal of Economic Education, 2010
In goods markets, an equilibrium price balances demand and supply. In a financial market, an equilibrium price also aggregates people's information to reveal the true value of a financial security. Although the underlying idea of informationally efficient markets is one of the centerpieces of capital market theory, students often have difficulties…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Experiential Learning, Educational Games, Microeconomics
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Bauer, Stephen M.; Flagg, Jennifer L. – Assistive Technology Outcomes and Benefits, 2010
A standard and comprehensive model is needed to evaluate and compare technology transfer systems and the stakeholders within these systems. The principle systems considered include federal laboratories, U.S. universities, the rehabilitation engineering research centers (RERCs), and large small business innovation research programs. An earlier…
Descriptors: Program Evaluation, Technology Transfer, Program Effectiveness, Educational Technology
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Bergstrom, Theodore C. – Journal of Economic Education, 2009
The author describes techniques that he uses to interactively teach economics principles. He describes an experiment on market entry and gives examples of applications of classroom clickers. Clicker applications include (a) collecting data about student preferences that can be used to construct demand curves and supply curves, (b) checking…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Microeconomics, Introductory Courses, Technology Uses in Education
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Somerville, R. A. – Journal of Economic Education, 2007
The author establishes a property of supply for a competitive firm: Assuming differentiability of the production frontier, linearly independent price vectors have disjoint image sets under the supply mapping. This property supports the main results. First, the author drew a simple proof of McFadden's proposition that differentiability of the…
Descriptors: Microeconomics, Consumer Economics, Theories, Economics Education
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Schultz, Jared C.; Millington, Michael J. – Rehabilitation Education, 2007
There is a well-documented, growing shortage of rehabilitation counseling professionals in the public sector. Using microeconomics principles, a theoretical model is offered to account for the personnel shortage and propose potential solutions to recruit and retain rehabilitation counselors in the public sector. Suggestions for rehabilitation…
Descriptors: Microeconomics, Models, Rehabilitation Counseling, Counselors
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Hayford, Marc D. – Journal of Economic Education, 2007
The author combines the supply and demand model of taxes with a Cournot model of bribe takers to develop a simple and useful framework for understanding the effect of corruption on economic activity. There are many examples of corruption in both developed and developing countries. Because corruption decreases the level of economic activity and…
Descriptors: Supply and Demand, Microeconomics, Economic Progress, Taxes
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Alden, Lori – Journal of Economic Education, 2006
The author describes a classroom experiment that illustrates the welfare effects of allocating a good on a first-come, first-served basis. In the first round, each student must decide how long to wait in an imaginary line for candy, without knowing how much will be distributed or how long others are willing to wait. In making this decision, a…
Descriptors: Educational Experiments, Decision Making, Supply and Demand, Microeconomics
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