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Burguillo, Juan C. – Computers & Education, 2010
This paper introduces a framework for using Game Theory tournaments as a base to implement Competition-based Learning (CnBL), together with other classical learning techniques, to motivate the students and increase their learning performance. The paper also presents a description of the learning activities performed along the past ten years of a…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Game Theory, Motivation, Competition
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Samuel Elliott; Geoffrey Elliott – English Journal, 2014
This article reports on an ethnographic analysis of students who play chess at a mixed comprehensive school in England. The authors explore how children learn when playing chess and speculate about how the appeal of the game could be used by secondary teachers to improve English lessons.
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Curriculum, Secondary School Students, Secondary School Teachers
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Miller, Ben; Watts, Michael – Journal of Economic Education, 2011
The authors list economic concepts and issues covered in the children's books published by Theodor Geisel and discuss his treatment of concepts that appear most often and that are treated in greater depth. Some concepts are sophisticated and taught as formal concepts only in college-level economics courses. Others are basic and used in economics…
Descriptors: Economics, Childrens Literature, Books, Instructional Materials
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Hofstede, Gert Jan; Murff, Elizabeth J. Tipton – Simulation & Gaming, 2012
The game SO LONG SUCKER was designed in the United States in 1964 with the aim of showing how potentially unethical behavior necessary for winning was inherent in the game's incentive structure. Sessions with East Asian participants, however, led to very different game dynamics in which collaborative rather than antagonistic behaviors occurred.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Games, Ethical Instruction, Asians
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Bowes, David; Johnson, Jay – College Teaching Methods & Styles Journal, 2008
This paper describes classroom experiments in cooperative behavior as examples of experiential learning in economics classes. Several games are briefly discussed and a new game in cartel behavior is presented. In this game, Students make production decisions as a cartel and earn revenues based on their own output decision and the output decision…
Descriptors: Educational Experiments, Classroom Environment, Student Behavior, Experiential Learning
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Blute, Marion – Social Forces, 2006
Gene-culture interactions have largely been modelled employing population genetic-type models. Moreover, in the most notable application to date, the "interactive" modes have been one way rather than bidirectional. This paper suggests using game theoretic, fully interactive models. Employing the logic utilized in population ecology for coevolution…
Descriptors: Evolution, Nature Nurture Controversy, Genetics, Models
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Beckman, Steven R. – Journal of Economic Education, 2003
Describes a series of matrix choice games that illustrate for students the concepts of monopoly, shared monopoly, Cournot, Bertrand, and Stackelberg behavior given either perfect complements or perfect substitutes. Suggests that the use of the games also allows for student dialogue about international trade and price wars. (JEH)
Descriptors: Competition, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Economics, Economics Education
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Correa, Hector – Higher Education Policy, 2001
Explaining that grade inflation may result from the professor's competition for favorable student evaluations, asserts that the Theory of Games could be useful for analyzing interactions among professors and their impact on the number of students attracted to their courses. Presents a model based on these assumptions and analyzes policy-relevant…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Competition, Enrollment Influences, Game Theory