粉笔与讲授:本科经济学教学全国调查

Chalk and Talk: A National Survey on Teaching Undergraduate Economics

American Economic Review · 1996
被引 299
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

基于全国调查数据,报告了本科经济学教学中各种教学方法的实际使用情况,为关注经济学教学改革的学者和教师提供参考。

Abstract

Reports on the desirable goals and characteristics of economics programs, and reforms proposed to attain such programs (e.g., W. Lee Hansen, 1991; Hirschel Kasper et al., 1991), have ignored the issue of how economics is to be taught. That is surprising because several popular trade books have recently appeared condemning teaching practices at American colleges and universities. Some of these books were written by economists (e.g., Martin Anderson's [1992] Impostors in the Temple) and used economics courses as notable examples of these problems. Long before these reports and books appeared, the National Council on Economic Education (NCEE), together with the American Economic Association's (AEA) Committee on Economic Education, began sponsoring programs to improve the teaching of economics and to promote innovative teaching methods. In Becker and Watts (1995), we describe many of these improvements and explain how economists could use alternative teaching methods in different undergraduate courses. Until now, however, we could not provide data on how widely those approaches were used. We do that here, based on responses to a national survey.'

经济学教学本科教育教学方法教学改革