Output list
Book
Principles of economics: print companion 2.0 to accompany connect master : economics
Published 2019
Book chapter
Published 2015
International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences, 21 - 25
Economic education focuses on identifying and developing teaching and research techniques that make economics more accessible, relevant, and applicable to both students and educators. The field offers a strong and diverse group of organizations that encourage and promote economic education. This article offers an overview of those organizations, as well as of the content that is typically covered in economics courses, the teaching methods used to teach that content, and the assessment of students and instructors.
Book chapter
Success in the economics major: is it path dependent?
Published 2014
New developments in economic education, 163 - 178
Journal article
The Test of Economic Literacy: Development and Results
Published 01/07/2013
The Journal of economic education, 44, 3, 298 - 309
In this study, the authors report on the revision of the Test of Economic Literacy for the fourth edition. The Test of Economic Literacy is a nationally-normed and standardized measure of the economic understanding of U.S. high school students. The economic content of the test is based on the Voluntary National Content Standards in Economics, which is used to establish the content validity for the test. The revision process is described and evidence on the test reliability and construct validity is presented from the test score analysis. The Test of Economic Literacy has a long and successful history of use by educators and researchers interested in economic education in high schools. The new edition should provide an improved instrument to continue that testing and research work.
Journal article
Published 02/2013
Journal of agricultural and applied economics, 45, 1, 1 - 15
Many states are adopting economic education standards for the K-12 curriculum, mandating economic education courses in rural and urban schools. We examine economic education outcomes for rural and urban students using test scores gathered during a national high school academic competition and by estimating a production function for economic education. We find only limited differences between the education production function in urban and rural settings and lower average scores for rural students. To close this gap, results suggest that rural schools should place economic content in the senior-year curriculum and provide teachers with increased postgraduate training in economics.
Journal article
THE PROPERTY VALUE PREMIUM OF A PLACE OF WORSHIP
Published 01/04/2012
Contemporary economic policy, 30, 2, 215 - 222
Using a unique data set of residential housing values, we improve on previous hedonic pricing and event studies literature to estimate the amenity effects of a new religious structure on local property values. We improve on previous research by extending our analysis with a pre- and post-treatment model. Using a pre- and post-treatment model, we do not find that the religious structure that we examined influenced the value of surrounding properties in the period after its completion. The results suggest that previous research using only post-completion data may mischaracterize the amenity effects of religious structures. (JEL R3)
Journal article
Published 01/01/2012
The Journal of economic education, 43, 1, 19 - 32
The term "Discouraged-Business-Major" (DBM) describes students who become discouraged with the rigorous standards of colleges of business and migrate to colleges of arts and sciences to complete a degree in economics under relaxed requirements (Salemi and Eubanks 1996). Following Salemi and Eubanks, the present authors examine a decade of demographic characteristics and ability measures for every economics and business graduate at a large Midwestern university. They find DBMs, but also note that major selection dynamics are much more complex than originally expected. Finally, they employ a multinomial logit model to estimate the marginal effects of student characteristics on major choice.
Journal article
Published 2012
As its economy struggled during the last decade, Michigan became the only state to lose population between the 2000 and 2010 Censuses. Michigan’s problems were well known and communities in other states sought to attract residents from Michigan. This paper describes the efforts of one Nebraska community, Columbus, to recruit residents from a specific Michi-gan micropolitan area. We also develop a model of destination choice by outmigrants from Michigan micropolitan areas. We find that counties that offer amenity and real wage ad-vantages have the greatest potential to attract Michigan outmigrants, that differences in un-employment rates do not influence destination choice, and that the potential for attracting workers drops with distance.
Journal article
Human Capital in The Classroom: The Role of Teacher Knowledge in Economic Literacy
Published 11/2011
The American Economist (New York, N.Y. 1960), 56, 2, 47 - 57
Renewed emphasis on increasing student academic achievement highlights the importance of improving educational quality despite limited educational budgets. This paper illustrates that investing in teachers' human capital has significant returns in the classroom. Using test and survey data on the educational background of teachers, we show that teacher knowledge and training have a significant impact on student performance and classroom productivity. Specifically, formal college-level instruction, learning by doing, and explicit measures of economic understanding all play important roles. Additionally, the data show that general in-service training is an imperfect substitute for formal education in economics. These results can be used to guide educational research, instructional programming, and school reform at the state and local levels.
Book chapter
Corruption and Creditworthiness: Evidence from Sovereign Credit Ratings
Published 21/02/2011
Sovereign Debt, 79 - 87
This chapter contains sections titled: Notes About the Authors