Options
Konventionelle und neue Medien in der volkswirtschaftlichen Ausbildung
Type
applied research project
Start Date
05 January 1995
End Date
01 January 2010
Status
ongoing
Keywords
Vokswirtschaftliche Lehre
E-Learning
Neue Medien
Interaktives Lernen
Interaktive Module
Leader contributor(s)
Member contributor(s)
Busch, Christian
Klasing, Mariko
Funder(s)
Range
Institute/School
Range (De)
Institut/School
Division(s)
Eprints ID
10684
19 results
Now showing
1 - 10 of 19
-
PublicationMacroeconomicsThis textbook combines theory and application, using many real-world case studies and examples. Rigorous and comprehensive, it offers a truly European and global perspective ideal for intermediate and applied macroeconomics students. New to this edition is a chapter on economic crises, showcasing the financial crisis and the sovereign debt crisis.
-
PublicationType: book section
-
-
PublicationIntermediate macroeconomics tutorials and appletsThe article presents a Web site for undergraduate macroeconomics instruction. The first section of this module, called macro in a nutshell, opens with a road map, a graphical interface that conveys an aggregate supply/aggregate demand perspective of the economy, displaying and linking key models and building blocks of intermediate macroeconomics. The second section, interactive macro, features standard models of intermediate macroeconomics programmed as Java applets.Type: journal articleJournal: Journal of Economic EducationVolume: 32Issue: 1
-
-
-
PublicationTeaching Real Business Cycles to UndergraduatesThe authors review the graphical approach to teaching the real business cycle model introduced by Barro (1984). Graphical and exact models are compared by means of impulse response functions. The graphical analysis can be used to equip students with an understanding of the economy's supply side dynamics.Type: journal articleJournal: Journal of Economic EducationVolume: 38Issue: 2
-
-
-
PublicationTeaching undergraduate economics in Europe: Volume, structure and contentThe structure and contents of undergraduate programs in economics and management sciences differ among the major European universities. Based on analyses of curriculums, course syllabuses, and adopted textbooks, the author looks at how much time is spent in pertinent programs, how time is allocated among different courses within programs, what common thematic denominators exist, and finally and most importantly, whether and in what way content taught in micro and macro courses differs. Based on examinations of how the coverage in major textbooks has evolved through successive editions, he also looks for trends and cycles in what is taught in undergraduate micro and macroeconomics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]Type: journal articleJournal: Journal of Economic EducationVolume: 32Issue: 3