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Showing 1 to 15 of 73 results Save | Export
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Paul Watts; Janet Hoskin; Radhika Upadhyay; Emma Tapley; Gosia Kwiatkowska – British Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2025
Introduction: This paper examines the experiences of people with learning disabilities in the United Kingdom as society transitions towards cashless transactions and services. It is a significant study because it highlights the need to understand their digital financial experiences. Methods: This study employed an inclusive, interpretivist…
Descriptors: Adults, Learning Disabilities, Attitudes, Disabilities
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van der Horst, Frank; Snell, Joshua; Theeuwes, Jan – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2021
All banknotes have security features which are intended to help determine whether they are false or genuine. Typically, however, the general public has limited knowledge of where on a banknote these security features can be found. Here, we tested whether counterfeit detection can be improved with the help of salient elements, designed to guide…
Descriptors: Monetary Systems, Banking, Deception, Identification
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Johnson, Paul; Staveley-O'Carroll, James – Journal of Economic Education, 2020
In this article, the authors describe a classroom experiment on exchange rates appropriate for undergraduate courses in macroeconomics, international economics, and money and banking. Student teams compete by managing virtual portfolios of six foreign currencies over a period of several weeks. Trading requires a few minutes in class. Students gain…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Undergraduate Students, Class Activities, Educational Experiments
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Neveu, Andre R. – Journal of Economic Education, 2020
The money creation and monetary policy chapters in the leading introductory textbooks commonly present an outdated and misleading approach that is now largely irrelevant. A preferable model would help students understand that money and monetary policy are about bank and household motives, the importance of capital, and the role of credit. An…
Descriptors: Macroeconomics, Introductory Courses, Economics Education, Monetary Systems
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Assan, Thomas E. B. – Africa Education Review, 2019
Classroom practitioners are expected to facilitate effective learning under the "Curriculum and Assessment Policy Statement" (CAPS) in South Africa. During this facilitation process, educators are required to become more resourceful in terms of their learning and teaching strategies. This article is based on a case study -- within the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Rural Schools, Rural Education, Educational Policy
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Allen, Amy – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2019
Early in the semester, during a seemingly benign math lesson over money, one of the students in my second and third grade blended classroom halted the instruction to ask "Wait! Why are there no women on money? Is there any money with women on it?" Never one to miss an opportunity to get my students thinking critically, we took some time…
Descriptors: Females, United States History, Monetary Systems, Banking
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Staveley-O'Carroll, James – Journal of Economic Education, 2018
Over the course of one semester, six empirical assignments that utilize FRED are used to introduce students of money and banking courses to the economic analysis required for the conduct of monetary policy. The first five assignments cover the following topics: inflation, bonds and stocks, monetary aggregates, the Taylor rule, and employment.…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Graphs, Assignments, Macroeconomics
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Bowes, David R. – American Journal of Business Education, 2014
Video clips are an excellent way to enhance lecture material. Television commercials are a source of video examples that should not be overlooked and they are readily available on the internet. They are familiar, short, self-contained, constantly being created, and often funny. This paper describes several examples of television commercials that…
Descriptors: Television Commercials, Teaching Methods, Banking, Economics Education
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Lopus, Jane S.; McDaniel, Kristen – Social Education, 2015
The Federal Reserve System (the Fed) is one of the most important financial institutions in the world. As the central bank of the United States, it influences the domestic money supply, credit, and interest rates with the goal of achieving stable prices and full employment for the world's largest economy. It provides a variety of services to…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Monetary Systems, Banking, Economic Climate
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Suiter, Mary C.; Wolla, Scott A. – Social Education, 2015
The Federal Reserve System is the central bank of the United States. The system includes 12 Federal Reserve Banks (and their associated branches) located throughout the country, with oversight by the Board of Governors in Washington, D.C. The diverse structure is designed to ensure that the interests of Main Street are represented along with those…
Descriptors: Money Management, Multiple Literacies, Economics Education, Economic Climate
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Sheridan, Brandon; Smith, Ben; Pleggenkuhle-Miles, Erin – Education Economics, 2017
University class structure is changing. To accommodate working students, programmes are increasing their offerings of long night classes--some lasting as long as six hours. While these long classes may be more convenient for students, they have unintended consequences as a result of cognitive load. Using a panel of 124 students (372 observations)…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Retention (Psychology), Student Characteristics
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Valcarcel, Victor J. – Journal of Economic Education, 2013
The author provides a general model to incentivize student involvement in an economics course on an ongoing basis. Rather than presenting students with a discrete number of diverse experiments to illustrate different economic concepts, he opts for the adoption of a single experiment that lives for the duration of the semester. This approach…
Descriptors: Macroeconomics, Economics Education, Learner Engagement, Student Participation
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Niederjohn, M. Scott; Wood, William C. – Social Education, 2009
Debates over how to promote a healthy economy are pervasive once more, after decades when it seemed such debates had been put to rest. The market meltdown of 2008 ended a long string of years in which monetary policy reigned supreme. Monetary policy is the regulation of money and the banking system to influence economic variables. Its adherents,…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Banking, Financial Policy, Monetary Systems
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Bofinger, Peter; Mayer, Eric; Wollmershauser, Timo – Journal of Economic Education, 2009
For the open economy, the workhorse model in intermediate textbooks still is the Mundell-Fleming model, which basically extends the investment and savings, liquidity preference and money supply (IS-LM) model to open economy problems. The authors present a simple New Keynesian model of the open economy that introduces open economy considerations…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Macroeconomics, Models, International Trade
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Saros, Daniel E. – Journal of Economic Education, 2009
The author offers innovative approaches to 3 topics that are typically only briefly mentioned (if at all) in money and banking courses. The first topic is a Treasury bill auction experiment in which students have an opportunity to participate directly. The results from a class of 14 money and banking students are used to explain how an instructor…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Banking, Monetary Systems, Course Content
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