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Bai, Jessica; Esche, Matthew; MacLeod, W. Bentley; Shi, Yifan – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2022
We introduce a model of the admissions process based upon standard agency theory and explore its implications with economics PhD admissions data from 2013-2019. We show that a subjective score that aggregates subjective ratings and recommendation letter features plays a more important role in determining admissions than an objective score based…
Descriptors: College Admission, Doctoral Programs, Admission Criteria, Letters (Correspondence)
Simkins, Scott P.; Maier, Mark H.; Ruder, Phil – Journal of Economic Education, 2021
In this article, the authors describe how Team-Based Learning (TBL) intentionally promotes learning strategies that learning sciences research has identified as highly effective to create powerful learning environments for students. The article illustrates how learning sciences principles and research findings inform and support the TBL framework,…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Economics Education, Educational Research, Research and Development
Allgood, Sam; McGoldrick, KimMarie – Journal of Economic Education, 2021
Chew and Cerbin (2021) outline nine cognitive challenges to student learning with which economic educators are likely familiar, even if the language used to describe them differs. In this article, the authors refrain from summarizing Chew and Cerbin's framework and instead focus on providing context for how those conducting research and developing…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Teaching Methods, Learning Processes, Language Usage
Johnson, Marianne; Meder, Martin E. – Journal of Economic Education, 2021
Technological interventions have been sold as improving student understanding of economics for decades. Yet despite the panoply of ways to incorporate technology, it is not clear which types of interventions consistently result in statistically significant improvements in learning outcomes. Of 145 papers devoted to the technology in collegiate…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Technology Uses in Education, Intervention, College Instruction
Goffe, William L. – Journal of Economic Education, 2021
Chew and Cerbin (2021) offer a fruitful way of thinking deeply about teaching economics. In this article, the author offers several ideas on how to offload parts of three of the cognitive challenges they identify to an online module that any instructor could assign to their students. Ideally, this module would be described in an economics…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Self Management, Learning Strategies, Short Term Memory
Zachary Ferrara – ProQuest LLC, 2021
The relative underrepresentation of women in economics education and academia is an issue that has been well-documented, yet remains contentious with regard to its exact origins and perpetuation. Further, the existing literature on economic education research offers little on the gender composition of the subfield and, by extension, if the gender…
Descriptors: Females, Economics Education, Women Faculty, Higher Education
Gnewuch, Matthias; Wohlrabe, Klaus – Education Economics, 2018
This paper investigates the efficiency of 188 economics departments around the world using data from RePEc. We go beyond the heavily used data envelopment analysis and utilize partial frontier analysis -- specifically order-a and order-m -- which addresses some of the drawbacks of the standard efficiency frontier analysis and allows for so-called…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Departments, Efficiency, Higher Education
Joshua Angrist; Marc Diederichs – Blueprint Labs, 2025
Elite economics PhD programs aim to train graduate students for a lifetime of academic research. This paper asks how advising affects graduate students' post-PhD research productivity. Advising is highly concentrated: at the eight highly-selective schools in our study, a minority of advisors do most of the advising work. We quantify advisor…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Doctoral Programs, Doctoral Dissertations, Research Training
Christopher D. Azevedo – Journal of Instructional Pedagogies, 2023
The use of online courses has expanded dramatically at institutions of higher education over the last several decades. Appropriate design of an online course is instrumental in determining the quality of the student experience and the amount of material students retain from the class. However, the instructor has a tremendous amount of freedom when…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Curriculum Development, Curriculum Design, Economics Education
Annisa Ratna Sari – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Learning engagement and career-relevant skills are both important elements in learning. Unfortunately, there is a lack of research related to learning engagement in massive open online courses (MOOCs) from MOOC instructors' point of view. Research is also needed on MOOC instructors' strategies to provide career-relevant content to the learners. In…
Descriptors: MOOCs, Teaching Methods, Educational Strategies, Learner Engagement
Amos Nnaemeka Amedu; Veronika Dwarika – Online Submission, 2023
This study developed a structural path model that explained economics students' academic adjustments using teachers' feedback and students' engagement, taking cognisance of the moderating effects of students' gender. This study used a correlational research design. Through random sampling, 150 participants were recruited for this study. The data…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Feedback (Response), Gender Differences, Teacher Student Relationship
Jana Nunvarova; Petra Poulova; Pavel Prazak – Journal on Efficiency and Responsibility in Education and Science, 2023
Digital storytelling (DST) is one of the alternative teaching methods and previous research shows its positive impact on students' motivation and learning outcomes, especially in humanities subjects. In vocational subjects such as economics, the effectiveness of this method is questionable. 856 respondents aged 15 to 19 from six business academies…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Technology Uses in Education, Outcomes of Education, Foreign Countries
Heidy Rico; Mario Alberto de la Puente Pacheco; Adrian Pabon; Ivan Portnoy – Cogent Education, 2023
This research aimed to investigate the impact of Simulation-Based Learning (SBL), specifically within the Model United Nations (MUN) framework, on enhancing critical thinking and improving academic performance in a sample of 42 undergraduate students studying International Relations at a university in Northern Colombia. The objectives were to…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods, Simulation
Swann, G. M. Peter – Journal of Economic Education, 2019
Many empirical economists say that the teaching of econometrics is unbalanced, and students are not well-prepared for the serious problems they will encounter with real data. Here, the author considers the problem of noisy data, which is present in most econometric studies, but receives far too little attention. Most econometric studies are done…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Economics, Data, Problems
Niederjohn, M. Scott; Holder, Kim – Social Education, 2019
Can teachers promote true economic understanding among students by adding a dose of psychology? Fans of behavioral economics, with its unique blend of psychology and economics, think so. Blending a bit of behavioral economics into social studies lessons provides answers to the ever-present questions that permeate every classroom,"What does…
Descriptors: Consumer Economics, Economics Education, Social Studies, Bias

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