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Chanita C. Holmes; Marlon R. Tracey – Journal of Economic Education, 2025
Instructors may use low-cost, light-touch strategies to help students achieve optimal effort in demanding upper-level courses. The authors of this study exploit an intervention that provides a series of personalized feedback emails to students about their relative performance, which is tied to approving messages or tips that encourage improvement.…
Descriptors: Class Rank, Economics Education, Grades (Scholastic), Advanced Courses
Leggett, Jack; Morgan, Bryan; Tang, Kam Ki – Journal of Economic Education, 2022
Modern economics courses require high mathematical proficiency, and low proficiency may reduce grades or cause students to avoid economics courses. The article's authors sought to improve students' mathematical skills and grades with a simple intervention based on repeated quizzing of building-block concepts. They analyzed data from four semesters…
Descriptors: Tests, Mathematical Concepts, Grades (Scholastic), Economics Education
Arnold, Ivo J. M. – Journal of Economic Education, 2022
The author of this article uses two empirical approaches to compare online to face-to-face proctored assessment. Using data from a Dutch economics program, he shows that the relationship between grades and human capital variables remains highly significant for courses with online proctored examinations. Additionally, a search for suspicious grade…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Supervision, Evaluation, Synchronous Communication
Shishir Shakya; Michael Levinstein – Journal of Economic Education, 2024
We estimate how much the average grade of students enrolled in introductory macroeconomics changes when the professor sends a reminder email. We utilize observational data to implement a difference-in-differences strategy and identify the plausibly causal effect of email nudges on the student's grade. The professor's reminder email boosts…
Descriptors: Macroeconomics, College Students, Blended Learning, Electronic Mail
Mallory Avery; Jane Caldwell; Christian D. Schunn; Katherine Wolfe – Journal of Economic Education, 2024
The presentation of economics in introductory courses has been highlighted as potentially exacerbating the underrepresentation of women in economics. The authors study the impact of a gender-neutral change in content and instruction in introductory economics courses intended to increase student engagement. By implementing meaningful applied…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Course Content, Females, Educational Experience
Smith, Ben O.; White, Dustin R.; Kuzyk, Patricia C.; Tierney, James E. – Journal of Economic Education, 2018
Information provided at the moment a person makes a decision can influence behavior in predictable ways. The United Kingdom's Behavioural Insights Team have used this idea to help improve the insulation of lofts, collect taxes, and even reduce litter. The authors of this article developed software that appends a personalized message to each…
Descriptors: Grades (Scholastic), Electronic Mail, Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education
Walstad, William B.; Miller, Laurie A. – Journal of Economic Education, 2016
Survey results from a national sample of economics instructors describe the grading policies and practices in principles of economics courses. The survey results provide insights about absolute and relative grading systems used by instructors, the course components and their weights that determine grades, and the type of assessment items used for…
Descriptors: Grades (Scholastic), Grading, Economics Education, Educational Policy
Rebeck, Ken; Walstad, William B. – Journal of Economic Education, 2015
The authors use U.S. public and private high school transcripts to analyze grade distribution patterns in economics courses across student and school characteristics, and compare these grades to those earned in other selected high school courses. Results are reported for the 53 percent of 2009 high school graduates who took a basic economics…
Descriptors: High School Students, Economics Education, Student Characteristics, Grades (Scholastic)
Main, Joyce B.; Ost, Ben – Journal of Economic Education, 2014
The authors apply a regression-discontinuity design to identify the causal impact of letter grades on student effort within a course, subsequent credit hours taken, and the probability of majoring in economics. Their methodology addresses key issues in identifying the causal impact of letter grades: correlation with unobservable factors, such as…
Descriptors: Grades (Scholastic), Course Selection (Students), Majors (Students), Student Behavior
Stock, Wendy A.; Ward, Kevin; Folsom, Justin; Borrenpohl, Teresa; Mumford, Sophie; Pershin, Zach; Carriere, Danielle; Smart, Heather – Journal of Economic Education, 2013
The authors examine the impacts of enrollment in a voluntary one-credit recitation class for ECON 101 students, focusing on course grades, course retention, and outcomes in later economics courses. The recitation classes were taught by undergraduate peer leaders with experience in upper-level microeconomics. Instead of being paid, the peer leaders…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Introductory Courses, Outcomes of Education, Grades (Scholastic)
Parker, Jeffrey – Journal of Economic Education, 2012
This article examines whether first-year students in introductory economics courses get better grades if they have other students in their on-campus residential unit who either are taking the same course or have taken the course in the past. The study uses nine years of data for the introductory economics course at Reed College. The author finds…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Introductory Courses, College Freshmen, Place of Residence
Asarta, Carlos J.; Fuess, Scott M., Jr.; Perumal, Andrew – Journal of Economic Education, 2013
For students taking intermediate-level economics, does it matter where they studied principles of economics? Does transferring college credit influence subsequent academic performance in economics? With a sample covering 1999-2008, the authors analyze in this article a group of nearly 1,000 students taking intermediate macroeconomics at a…
Descriptors: Macroeconomics, Economics Education, College Transfer Students, Community Colleges
Olney, Martha L. – Journal of Economic Education, 2015
The University of California, Berkeley sends more undergraduate students to economics PhD programs than any other public university. While this fact is surely a function of its size, there may be lessons from the Berkeley experience that others could adopt. To investigate why Berkeley generates so many economics PhD students, the author convened…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Doctoral Programs, Economics Education, Student Surveys
Nalley, Lanier; McKenzie, Andrew – Journal of Economic Education, 2011
This study created an experimental design with which students can empirically assess their risk behavior with respect to exam grades within an expected utility framework. Specifically, the authors analyzed students' risk preferences associated with taking exams and earning a "risky" unknown grade versus not taking exams and instead…
Descriptors: Grades (Scholastic), Tests, Undergraduate Students, Risk
Artes, Joaquin; Rahona, Marta – Journal of Economic Education, 2013
In this article, the authors aim to identify the causal effect of the use of graded problem sets on academic performance of Spanish students. The identification strategy relies on an experiment in which the authors exploit variation arising from observing the performance of nearly 300 students taking the same class during the same semester and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Comparative Analysis, Academic Achievement