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Ghislain Nono Gueye; Jonathan R. Peterson – Journal of Economic Education, 2024
The authors present a Web application they designed in the R programming language as an experiential learning tool for teaching production theory. The app simulates production decisions where a manager is tasked to find the optimal mixture of inputs through experimentation. Users of the application are instructed to use calculations and intuitions…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Teaching Methods, Computer Oriented Programs, Programming Languages
Corey, Joab – Journal of Economic Education, 2023
There is a well-known connection between the barriers to entry created by an overburdensome regulatory climate and lower levels of productivity that create less economic growth. Many economics students are under the impression that regulations are designed to protect the workers and consumers as well as improve product quality, so they are often…
Descriptors: Game Based Learning, Barriers, Money Management, Class Activities
Roetzel, Peter Gordon; Roetzel, Lina – Open Education Studies, 2023
In this article, we contribute to the longstanding debate among economists regarding the question of "nature or nurture" with respect to economics students' attitudes toward various allocation mechanisms for a scarce resource. While previous research starts the debate by beginning with first-year economics students, we aim to evaluate…
Descriptors: Nature Nurture Controversy, Economics Education, School Schedules, Student Attitudes
Sarah E. Stanlick; George DeMartino; Sharon D. Welch – Journal of Higher Education Outreach and Engagement, 2023
The democratization of knowledge is liberating and has presented some new and difficult challenges. When everyone can position themselves as an expert, how do we create new frames of intellectual and pragmatic knowledge with integrity? How do we understand the histories of expert privilege and harm that have led us to this time of uncertainty? And…
Descriptors: Expertise, School Community Relationship, Power Structure, Ethics
Strenio, Jacqueline – Journal of Economic Education, 2023
Cooperative learning is associated with a variety of potential benefits to students, including better comprehension and retention, improved perceptions and attitudes, and increased openness to diversity. Yet, there is limited evidence or instruction on cooperative learning activities in asynchronous online classrooms, an increasingly common course…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Learning Activities, Electronic Learning, Asynchronous Communication
Cook, Nathaniel P. S.; Pantuosco, Angie – Journal of Economic Education, 2022
In this article, the authors describe an interactive classroom simulation that helps students learn some of the most important ideas from models of international trade with heterogeneous firms. Students make entry/exit decisions for individual firms with different marginal costs of production. The simulation consists of five rounds, beginning with…
Descriptors: Economics Education, International Trade, Simulation, Class Activities
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
Simon Choat; Christina Wolf; Siobhan O'Neill – Studies in Higher Education, 2024
This article explores initiatives to decolonise the curriculum via two specific disciplines, namely Economics and Politics, both of which have tended to marginalise the study of race, empire, and colonialism and whose canonical thinkers are overwhelming white. By providing the first comparative analysis of decolonising initiatives in these…
Descriptors: Universities, Decolonization, Economics Education, Political Science
Todd R. Jones; Arielle A. Sloan – Journal of Economic Education, 2024
In this article, the authors document the educational pedigrees of faculty at the top 96 economics programs in the United States. They use roster data of 96 top U.S. economics departments to provide a comprehensive update and expansion on data regarding the academic origins--both undergraduate and doctoral--of tenure-track faculty. Nearly 60…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Economics Education, Tenure, Teacher Characteristics
Sudipta Roy; Caleb Lewis – Education Economics, 2024
Goal setting and grade loss aversion have individually been found to be effective motivators for student performance. We combine these two strategies to investigate, in a university setting, the effectiveness of grade endowment within a goal-setting framework. Our participants set grade goals which some must earn the traditional way, thus framed…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Economics Education, Goal Orientation, Academic Achievement
Wasana Karunarathne; Chris Selman; Tracii Ryan – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2024
Feedback is a process in which students play a central role. To support this process, recent conceptual research suggests that students need to develop feedback literacies. However, additional empirical research is required to validate emergent frameworks of feedback literacy, including an investigation of the components of feedback literacy,…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Multiple Literacies, College Freshmen, Business Administration Education
Nicolas Frölich; Karl Sebastian Schellhammer – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2024
Introductory undergraduate statistics courses widely focus on statistical concepts or software-based data analysis. Despite the fact that the analysis of real data has shown to enhance students' engagement, the step of data collection is often neglected. Once students know the challenges of data collection, they are more aware of potential…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Statistics, Business Administration Education, Economics Education
Lena Maleševic Perovic – Journal of Economic Education, 2024
The author of this article provides an example of how one might incorporate behavioral economics into teaching macroeconomics or labor economics at an undergraduate level. The focus is on two macroeconomic concepts--wage determination and the Phillips curve--and shows that the implications and conclusions of both models differ from their textbook…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Macroeconomics, Teaching Methods, Labor Market
Leon Felipe Guzman Lizardo – ProQuest LLC, 2024
This thesis collects three essays on applied microeconomics. The first essay proposes an econometric framework to study the role played by course-assignment mechanisms in shaping the learning outcomes observed in higher-education institutions. Particular emphasis is placed on the existence of student-professor match effects in the production of…
Descriptors: College Students, College Faculty, Teacher Student Relationship, Macroeconomics
Stefania Badiglio; Giuseppe Chiazzese; Vito Pipitone; Luciano Seta – International Journal on E-Learning, 2024
This study explores the interaction between artificial intelligence (AI) and human behavior in economic contexts, focusing on using generative AI, such as ChatGPT, to examine trust and reciprocity. Through an experiment conducted at LUMSA in Palermo, 61 economics students participated in three economic games: the Ultimatum Game, the Trust Game,…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Computer Software, Asynchronous Communication, Man Machine Systems