Posts Tagged ‘education’

Post-Crash economics clashes with ‘econ tribe’

http://ckmurray.blogspot.com/2014/04/post-crash-economics-clashes-with-econ.html

What is it all about?
The PCES report provides a concise overview of the systematically narrow and outdated teaching approach in economics, which unfortunately simply reflects the mainstream practice of economics. It highlights how the economics profession, and economic teaching, has seen a ‘great narrowing’ over the past two decades, all but redefining the discipline away from the study of economic phenomena, to the study of a particular family of equilibrium marginal models.

At a practical level the report offers guidance for improving teaching, and a wholeheartedly agree with the points made, which I summarise as follows (emphasis is quoted text)

  1. Economics education should begin with the study of economic problems, where economic phenomena are outlined and the student is given a toolkit and must evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of how different theories explain different phenomena.
  2. Introduce pluralism so that students understand that different models and theories can be applied or are most useful in different situations. Students should be able to consider a variety of theories before forming judgements. This is important because economic theory is not universally applicable and much depends much on institutional, historical and social contexts.
  3. Include the study of institutional power structures and politics. In doing so, students should be aware of the ethics of being an economist and a consideration of the ethical consequences of economic theory.
  4. Ensure that the philosophy of economics, or the more generally the philosophy of science, forms a core part of the curriculum. Student should be able to understandwhich assumptions are justified in a scientific theory and how rigorous must the ability to falsify a theory must be.
  5. Finally, provide students an understanding of the historical development of a particular model or economic paradigm in order to contextualise the approach and provide insight into the problems it was designed to solve and how context influenced its formation.

 

April 9, 2:00pm – 3:00pm

As zoologists, psychologists, anthropologists, and many educators know, playing games is at the heart of learning. Teachers have long used rhetorical games like debates or mind games such as Socratic elenchus to encourage critical thinking. But what about video and computer games? While readily accepted as play, games are increasingly being viewed as a teaching tool. What role might they play in fostering critical thinking, creativity, collaboration and complex decision-making skills in the liberal arts? (Times EDT)

Held online via desktop videoconferencing.
Description

Ten years ago, Beni Balak, associate professor of economics at Rollins College, began using computer games in his classes. As a long-time computer gamer turned professor, he had observed that many of the best practices in pedagogical research were adopted by the electronic game industry. Today, the electronic game industry leads the entertainment sector economy with $70+ billion in annual sales, influencing the economy, culture, and learning. While some teachers remain skeptical about the value of video and computer games in education, over the past decade, a body of theoretical and applied pedagogical work on the use of games as teaching tools has emerged. Gamification in higher education generally refers to video and computer games and involves two related, but distinct approaches: using games as teaching tools and structuring entire courses as games.

In this seminar, Balak will identify the principles he employed and the specific structures of the courses he has gamified both using games (i.e., Civilization and World of Warcraft) as well as, more recently, gamifying the curriculum. Beyond the fundamental changes he made to the syllabi and the grading structure, he is beta-testing a learning management system (LMS) specifically designed for this purpose. Join us for this seminar and learn about his progress developing a gamified course structure, how it engages students and accelerates learning, as well as the difficulties he has encountered as he continues to explore the potential of games in the liberal arts.

Recommended Resources

Please review and explore these resources to prepare for active engagement with your fellow seminar participants.

Further Reading
  • Gee, J. P. (2013). The anti-education era: Creating smarter students through digital learning. New York, NY: Palgrave MacMillian.
  • Gee, J. P. (2007). What video games have to teach us about learning and literacy. New York, NY: Palgrave MacMillian.
  • Sheldon, L. (2012). The multiplayer classroom: Designing coursework as a game. Boston, MA: Centage Learning.
  • Marczewski, A. (2013). Gamification: A simple introduction & a bit more.
Seminar Leader

Benjamin Balak is associate professor of economics at Rollins College in Winter Park, Florida. He specializes in the history, methodology, and rhetoric of economics, and in comparative economic systems and cultures. He has presented in numerous conferences, published several journal articles and book chapters, written a book on the rhetoric of economics, and taught a wide variety of interdisciplinary and economics courses. His recent work is increasingly focused on the teaching of economics which he regards as highly problematic and adversely affecting the current economic conversation: Real-world economic literacy is singularly important for having functioning democracies at a time of epochal economic change. He has spent more than nine years experimenting with technologically-enhanced pedagogy to breathe life into the teaching of economics and to place it in historical perspective. A self-identified computer geek and gamer since the late 70s, he has been using computer games to teach economics and is researching the topic with the help of students. He earned his B.A. in international economics from the American University of Paris (France), continued his graduate work at the University of Kent at Canterbury (UK) and earned a Ph.D. in economics from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Event Hashtag

Participants are encouraged to share their thoughts on Twitter via this event’s hashtag: #nitle.

Registration

Those interested in technologically-enhanced pedagogy, curricular design, and digital games and culture should attend this seminar. Attendance by institutional teams is encouraged; individuals are also welcome to participate.

Please register online by Monday, April 7, 2014. Participation in NITLE Shared Academics is open to all active member institutions of the NITLE Network as a benefit of membership and as space allows. No additional registration fee applies.

Questions

For more information about this event, please contact Georgianne Hewett at ghewett@nitle.org.


NITLE Shared Academics logoNITLE Shared AcademicsTM models a new approach to liberal education – made possible through strategic collaboration, driven by shared knowledge, and supported by emerging technologies. Campuses learn how inter-institutional academic exchange works by actively participating in it, building the knowledge and experience to re-architect liberal education.

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This from Doug Henwood (http://www.leftbusinessobserver.com):
So according to fresh projections from the BLS, the 10 most rapidly growing jobs over the next decade, accounting for a quarter of total job growth, require on average no more than a high school diploma, and only one – nursing – pays more than the national median wage.Elites expect a future of mostly shitty jobs, but they can’t say that publicly. So they spew bullshit like this, and take potshots at art history while they’re at it.BLS: http://www.bls.gov/news.release/ecopro.t05.htm.

In Wisconsin, Obama orders review of job training programs
politico.com
WAUKESHA, Wis. — President Barack Obama turned his focus here Thursday to efforts to improve job training programs nationwide, as he continued his efforts to show he is doing what he can on economic issues without Congress’s help. The president’s stop here kicked off the second

An Alienated Finkelstein Discusses His Writing, Being Unemployable, And Noam Chomsky – Urban Times.

I’m desperately trying to avoid this and willing to compromise by teaching students with documentary films, and video games within a flexible curricular structure but, while I’m a popular prof, it still seems like fighting windmills all to often and Finkelstein has been my hero since the 90s