经济学入门课程中教学方法是否随班级规模变化

Does Pedagogy Vary with Class Size in Introductory Economics

American Economic Review · 1995
被引 41
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

利用TUCE III数据,研究经济学入门课程中教师是否根据班级规模调整教学方法,发现班级规模对学习效果的影响可能被低估。

Abstract

The norming of the third edition of the Test of Understanding College Economics (TUCE III) has produced a valuable data set (Phillip Saunders, 1994). These data describe 93 introductory macro and 96 introductory microeconomics classes taught by 131 different instructors at 53 U.S. colleges and universities in 1989-1990. It is tempting to use this sample to investigate how class size influences learning. The nonexperimental nature of the data, however, raises the possibility of an endogeneity problem: department chairs may assign better teachers to larger classes, and those teachers, in turn, may attract even greater numbers of students. Teaching quality, therefore, may be higher in larger classes. Thus, the discovery from these data of any deleterious effect on learning from larger classes may be only a lower bound. The education literature, admirably surveyed by Wilbert J. McKeachie (1990), suggests that learning is not much affected by class size. One reason for this result may be that instructors do not adjust their teaching methods to class size. In this paper we use the TUCE III data to examine whether introductory economics instructors vary pedagogy with class size. I. The Role of Instructor Behavior

教学方式班级规模经济学导论TUCE III