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Showing 1 to 15 of 62 results Save | Export
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Clark, Michael J. – Journal of Economic Education, 2020
The Alchian Maze uses active learning for teaching important economic concepts like spontaneous order and the power of profit and loss. While the game is an effective teaching tool, it is also cheap, low tech, and requires little advance preparation. The author of this article provides an overview on how to create and run an Alchian Maze. A number…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Active Learning, Microeconomics, Educational Games
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Kalmi, Panu; Rahko, Jaana – Journal of Economic Education, 2022
The authors of this article studied the effects of game-based financial education approaches using a sample of lower-secondary school students in Finland. The sample consisted of 640 students from 42 schools in different areas of the country. The authors focused on three different game-based interventions using a pre- and post-intervention survey…
Descriptors: Game Based Learning, Economics Education, Money Management, Secondary School Students
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Hong, Bei – Journal of Economic Education, 2020
In this article, the author describes a classroom experiment in which participants make decisions to achieve the lowest-cost production. Student volunteers acting as smartphone companies are provided with confidential information representing their own cost of production and are asked to make trade decisions to form a supply chain at the lowest…
Descriptors: Supply and Demand, Educational Games, Educational Experiments, Class Activities
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Duzhak, Evgeniya; Hoff, K. Jody; Lopus, Jane S. – Journal of Economic Education, 2021
"Chair the Fed" is an award-winning online educational game developed by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco to help players learn about monetary policy. Players assume the role of Fed Chair and adjust the federal funds rate to try to achieve low inflation and low unemployment. If successful, they are reappointed to another term.…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Educational Games, Computer Games, Financial Policy
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Carattini, Stefano; Fenichel, Eli P.; Gordan, Alexander; Gourley, Patrick – Journal of Economic Education, 2020
"Cap and trade" is one of the most innovative policy options developed by environmental economists. By placing a cap on a social bad and allowing firms to buy and sell the right to generate it, policymakers combine government intervention with market-based incentives to improve welfare and internalize the externality. Such programs…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Conservation (Environment), Class Activities, Educational Games
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Barseghyan, Gayane; Grigoryan, Aram – Journal of Economic Education, 2019
The authors develop a two-stage classroom experiment to illustrate convergence to long-run equilibrium in a market where price-taking firms are capacity-constrained. Once equilibrium in the first stage is established, capacity constraints are introduced by imposing discontinuities in the fixed costs of several firms. The experiment demonstrates…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Experiments, Class Activities, Microeconomics
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Palm-Forster, Leah H.; Duke, Joshua M. – Journal of Economic Education, 2019
Traffic congestion and road tolls are familiar economic concepts for most undergraduates; however, students often have difficulty explaining exactly how theoretical principles like externalities and social welfare are related to their real-world experiences, such as driving. The authors present a classroom exercise to demonstrate how congestion…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Class Activities, Microeconomics, Transportation
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Gary A. Hoover; Ebonya Washington – Journal of Economic Education, 2024
Economics has a well-documented problem with diversity. Literacy-targeted (LT) courses designed for a broader spectrum of students have the potential to help address the underrepresentation of women and racial/ethnic minorities in the discipline. The authors of this article explore how, by using the LT approach, introductory economics instructors…
Descriptors: Student Interests, Economics Education, Diversity, Inclusion
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Dissanayake, Sahan T. M.; Jacobson, Sarah A. – Journal of Economic Education, 2021
Payments for ecosystem services (PES) programs use an incentive-based approach to pursue environmental goals. While they are common policy tools, key concepts determining their efficacy are nuanced and hard to grasp. This article presents a new interactive game that explores the functioning and implications of PES programs. Participants play the…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Educational Games, Incentives, Conservation (Environment)
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O'Roark, Brian; Grant, William – Journal of Economic Education, 2018
The valuable insights of game theory sometimes remain out of reach for students who are overwhelmed by the subject's complexity. Comic book applications of game theory, with superheroes as players, can facilitate enthusiasm and classroom interaction to enhance the learning of game theory. Drawing from content in superhero movies and books, the…
Descriptors: Game Theory, Teaching Methods, Cartoons, Picture Books
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Roush, Justin R.; Johnson, Bruce K. – Journal of Economic Education, 2018
The authors of this article describe an adaptation of the rent-seeking game by Goeree and Holt (1999) to the recruiting of athletes by NCAA Division I football and basketball teams. Students engage in an effort-based lottery, i.e., recruiting to sign a blue-chip prospect. The winner gets the prize--the player's marginal revenue product in excess…
Descriptors: College Athletics, College Students, Student Recruitment, Athletes
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Duke, Joshua M.; Sassoon, David M. – Journal of Economic Education, 2017
The concept of negative externality is central to the teaching of environmental economics, but corrective taxes are almost always regressive. How exactly might governments return externality-correcting tax revenue to overcome regressivity and not alter marginal incentives? In addition, there is a desire to achieve a double dividend in the use of…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Educational Games, Class Activities, Taxes
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Moryl, Rebecca L.; Gabriele, Florencia; Desvira, Jannet – Journal of Economic Education, 2019
In this article, the authors describe an innovative charades-based educational game, HeadsUp! Econ, and its use for effective economics instruction. Results of a self-assessment survey of students demonstrate that implementing HeadsUp! Econ as an active learning game provides students opportunities to: (1) practice identifying which concepts are…
Descriptors: Educational Games, Economics Education, Review (Reexamination), Active Learning
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Secchi, Silvia; Banerjee, Simanti – Journal of Economic Education, 2019
The authors present a semester-long game to teach the role of economics in natural resources management. The game is framed within a fisheries context: multiple student fisheries harvest fish to maximize yield/profit, which is measured using a piecewise linear function. There are prizes for both the student and the group with the highest…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Economics Education, Natural Resources, Role
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Caviglia-Harris, Jill L.; Melstrom, Richard T. – Journal of Economic Education, 2015
In this article, the authors describe a simple classroom game that demonstrates the advantage of tradable emissions permits in regulating environmental pollution. Students take on the role of polluters who must consider the costs of complying with a uniform reduction and a tradable permits program. The class is divided into high-cost polluters and…
Descriptors: Educational Games, Economics Education, Class Activities, Pollution
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