Abstract

Surveys of business leaders indicate that they believe colleges generally do a poor job of developing transferable skills (e.g., writing, critical and analytical thinking) in their graduates. Economics instructors often attempt to convey these skills as a secondary benefit of content delivery and efforts to get students to ‘think like an economist’. We argue that the development of the skills that transfer across disciplines and into the job market should be more purposeful, particularly since most students take only one or two economics classes in college. In this paper, we present two examples of projects – an integrated data/writing project for a Principles of Microeconomics class and a real-world simulation project for an Agricultural Finance class – designed to help students develop skills that transfer across classes and into the job market. These projects are designed to build skills in a sequential and integrated manner (i.e., scaffolding), giving students an opportunity to build upon and practice previously developed skills. We provide a description of each project and a brief review of the outcomes and issues (e.g., benefits and limitations) of each project. Our initial experiences would indicate that students perceive value from the approach of placing explicit emphasis on the development of transferable skills.

Highlights

  • Surveys of business leaders often find that they believe recent college graduates are not prepared to enter the workforce

  • In this we present two examples of projects – an integrated data/writing project for a Principles of Microeconomics class and a real-world simulation project for an Agricultural Finance class – designed to help students develop skills that transfer across classes and into the job market

  • This paper presents a couple of approaches designed to obtain this outcome – an integrated data/writing project designed for a Principles of Microeconomics course and a real-world simulation designed for an Agricultural Finance course

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Summary

Introduction

Surveys of business leaders often find that they believe recent college graduates are not prepared to enter the workforce. A quick review of the Journal of Economic Education demonstrates the wide variety of teaching innovations currently being used in the classroom, including classroom experiments, writing assignments, and the use of media to convey economic concepts (Blackwell, 2011; Simpson & Carroll, 1999; Considine, 2006; Watts & Christopher, 2012) These approaches are often centered on the conveyance of content, while placing less explicit focus on the development of transferable skills. This paper presents a couple of approaches designed to obtain this outcome – an integrated data/writing project designed for a Principles of Microeconomics course and a real-world simulation designed for an Agricultural Finance course These projects are designed to develop transferable skills, while at the same time strengthen the students' understanding and retention content. The failure to connect assignments, both with each other and the content of the course, gives students the impression that the projects are 'busy work'

Project Description
Project Outcomes and Issues
Simulation Project
Conclusions
Section One – Data Presentation and Analysis
Findings
Section Three – Position Paper
Full Text
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