Friday, December 30, 2011

Introduction to Frank's Book Econ Naturalist

Here is presentation I created based on Robert Frank's book Econ Naturalist. I will be using this book for the micro section of Econ 106

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Jeff Sach

This was an interesting interview that could be used in class.
It is Jeff Sach on CBC Canada.
Here is the link to Jeff Sachs biography.

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Opportunity cost

First Night Econ 106


Sunday, December 25, 2011

Gap Minder

use this site for Econ 106
Here are some downloads
Here is the link for how to use in Class


Economics for Humans

This caught my attention Economics for Humans
It deals with GDP and measurements 

Monday, December 12, 2011

Suessonomics

This could be an interesting exercise for my Econ 106. Have them write a rhyme for an economic concept.

Monday, October 31, 2011

Socratic Method

I had considered applying the Socratic method in my classes. However, I never figured out how to do it in an Economics course. I am glad I never tried it because faculty members at other schools are denied tenure. Here is an Article.

Monday, October 17, 2011

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Reading on Game Theory

All men can see the tactics whereby I conquer, but what none can see is the strategy out of which victory is evolved.—Sun Tzu
I am thinking that students would be interested in game theory. They like the element of surprise. Last semester they would become extremely engaged only if I challenged their common beliefs. They would try to prove me wrong only to lose because I would set up the rules of the game. I need to come up with some more that will challenge their beliefs.

Friday, March 25, 2011

Debating Books

During the past two weeks I have been reading spousonomics and next I will start reading The Invisible Hook: the hidden economics of pirates. I may assign one or the other to my Econ 106 next Fall.
After reading both books the question I need to ask will students be more interested in the married life or piracy?

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Things-Change
For a long time now I have been thinking of taking a drawing class to improve my teaching. I imagined drawing pictures that tell stories for students and gets them engaged in the lesson similar to what is done in the video below. But I ran across a website called Behaviorgap.com which does the same thing but with very little artistic ability (picture above).


Double-dip recession from Marketplace on Vimeo.

Wednesday, March 09, 2011

Excitement Today


This Hawk showed up today in the middle of my lecture and the students were excitied by seeing him there. I watched students who were forcing themselves to stay awake wake up in an instant. Was it the surprise element or the fact that something real was in front of them?

Thursday, March 03, 2011

Diminishing Marginal Utility Experiment

Yesterday, I conducted the Chocolate experiment with my class. On Monday I gave them the lecture on Jeremy Bentham,  Utility and Marginal Utility. Most of them accepted the idea as presented and said "that makes sense"!
On Wednesday (yesterday) I conducted the experiment but made sure the result would not match the results as presented in the lecture. I gave them a variety of chocolate so that the Marginal Utility would not fall. To my surprise the students picked up on this and criticized my experiment (see the end of the first video).


After this first round, I ran the experiment as it was meant to be run. I gave all of the credit to the students and the experiment worked out as Jeremy predicted.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Maybe Next Semester

 I just order the book Spousonomics after hearing an interview with the authors on Marketplace. If this book is any good, next year I will use it for Econ 106.
Topics covered match the course outline for the class. According to the table of contents on Amazon and on their website,  topics  in the book are 1) Division of Labor 2) Incentives 3)Supply and Demand  and 4) Moral Hazard.  I would need another book to cover the macro topics listed in the course outline.

Wednesday, February 09, 2011

Second Week Of Class

I have started listening and creating lectures based on lectures given by various famous economists at top schools. I find these lectures on i-tunes U and spend the weekends listening taking notes.
Next I think about how I can simplify the material for my introductory class and create power points.  Today I tested one of these PowerPoint in class and it was a success.
The students wanted to know more and I gave them the link to the episode on i-tunes U.  Actually one girl with an i-pod touch asked me if she had downloaded the correct course or not?
This lecture was a simplified version of one given by Robert Shiller given to his Financial Market class at Yale.

Mike has recommended that you check out Financial Markets - Video

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Mike has recommended that you check out Financial Markets - Video:

Cover Art

Financial Markets - Video

Robert Shiller

Finance

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Friday, January 14, 2011

Econ haiku

The following haikus are from freakomomics website:
No. 1, posted by Tim:

Demand curve slopes down
Because the more cake I eat,
The less cake I want.
No. 2, posted by Calum:

A friend and I, jailed;
We agreed to stay silent
(But I still confessed).
No. 3, posted by LiaStarLight:

No matter how hard
I shake my money maker,
It is not enough.
No. 4, posted by Nate C.:

Sales of ice cream seem
To correlate with crime rate?
Simply summer heat.
No. 5, posted by Sean:

Can we work it out
If there aren’t transaction costs?
But of Coase we can.
No. 6, posted by Sophie:

Haiku writers know
The opportunity cost
Of a syllable.