Economics 100
The American Economy

 

 

Notes, Homework, and Class Schedule                      Textbook                      Grading System

Course Description          Instruction and Preparation         Goals and Objectives

Erroneous Expectations                        Helpful Expectations

Location and Time
Lecture:  MacLean Hall 166  MWF 8::30, 11:30 and 12:30 (I have three different classes.)

Instructor
Gregory Stutes
Office: 380 K MacLean Hall
Telephone: 477-4027

E-mail: stutes@mnstate.edu
Office Hours: MW 1:30-4:30,TR 9:00-11:00  Or by appt.

I am also the Director of the Center for Economic Education.  In this position I will sometimes need to visit high school classes and high school teachers.  I will try not to miss office hours, but it seems that I always miss some every semester.

Course Description:

This course will introduce students to critical thinking in  economics and use those tools to examine economic issues, problem-solving tools that economists use to analyze these issues, and the associated public policy concerns. First, we will introduce economics in general, tools of logic and critical thinking, and some of the tools of economists. Using these tools, we will overview how markets work and examine some economic problems that consumers face. 

Next, we will address a large microeconomic topic, behavior of the firm. This section will concentrate on two theoretical models: Perfect Competition and Monopoly. 

The last major section of our class is an introduction to macroeconomics. While the first part of the class looked at individuals separately, macroeconomics will examine the economy as a whole. We will begin with the measurement indexes and ratios and use these to examine the behavior of the United States over the past 100 years. Finally, we will conclude with an introduction to several macroeconomic topics including financial markets, unemployment, the role of money, and inflation. Throughout the course, I will relate our discussion to topics in United States history. (This is my area of interest.) However, if you know a current event that relates to our studies, please draw my attention to it. 

Lastly, the most important goal we should set is to have fun. We are trying to make some sense out of this crazy world; it is a difficult task, but a very interesting one.

Information for future teachers

This course fulfills BOT standards 8710.4800 for teachers of social studies.
Applicable Standards for this Class:

(2) the ability to use a wide range of instructional practices,  approaches, methods, and curriculum materials to support reading instruction including:

      (h) the ability to plan instruction and select strategies that help students read and understand science texts, including the ability to help students:

           (i)  recognize fact and opinion and the words that signal opinions and judgments;

           (iii)  thinking critically, for example, drawing inferences or conclusions from facts, analyzing author’s purpose and point of view, discerning cause and
                  effect relationships, detecting bias, and evaluating evidence

Instruction and Preparation

The course will be presented in a non-technical manner. Mathematically speaking, the basic analytical tools will be simple algebra and graphic analysis. Lectures will follow the course outline and the textbook. The reading material will provide excellent guidance for practically all of the lecture material. However, not every topic in the lecture will appear in the textbook, and not every page of reading will be covered in class.  This is especially true for the Friday topics lectures.  Fridays will be special applications of what we have been learning.

Textbook

N. Gregory Mankiw  Essentials of Economics

 

Aplia Website
Weekly homework assignments are found on the Aplia website. These assignments will collectively count for 15% of your grade. The Aplia site requires a separate registration process. Here are the steps:

  1. Connect to www.aplia.com.
  2. Complete the Configuration Test and make adjustments to your configuration if necessary.
  3. Return to the Sign In page and click Create a New Account.
  4. Choose Student Account.
  5. You will then be asked to enter your course key, which is: HAHG-KK45-8GN4.
  6. You will be prompted to enter your e-mail address and select a password.

 

If you are in the 8:30 class, you are in section A

If you are in the 11:30  class, you are in section B

If you are in the 12:30 class, you are in section C

You will only need to register once. After the registration process is complete, you will not need to enter the course key again. For any technical or sign-in problems, please send Aplia an e-mail by clicking the Support link in the upper-right corner of any page or by e-mailing support@aplia.com

Student benefits: By completing regular work in association with the lectures, you will be better prepared for the lectures and exams in the course. Cramming is not an effective method of learning. Think of the regular assignments on Aplia as a weekly workout. Practicing and applying what you are learning from Aplia and lectures will better prepare you for class.

Aplia assignments: Most Aplia assignments are graded. You will have three attempts at each question, and you will receive feedback about your answer and an explanation of the question. You also have the option to save your work and come back later to finish the question and check your answer; if you choose this option and do not return, the work you had completed will be graded at the due date. After the due date passes, you will be unable to change your answers or submit any new work. The software does not care whether you have an excuse or not. These assignments are posted weeks in advance. Complete them early to avoid any emergencies preventing you from finishing them before the due date.

There is a cost for Aplia.  You may register and use the website for a grace period without paying the fee. If you are considering dropping this course during the drop/add period, do not make a payment until you are sure. You will need to pay the full amount before the end of the grace period to continue using the site and part of your grad depends on this site. You may pay online with a credit card or Aplia Access Card available in the bookstore, or you can mail a check or money order to the address provided on the Aplia site. This course fee will include access to a digital copy of the text through the Aplia site, so you have to buy a physical textbook only if you desire one.

Grading System
Midterm I                           15%
Midterm II                          17%
Midterm II                          17%
Midterm IV and Final       17% + 10%
Aplia                                    18%
In-class Assignments        6%

 

No make-up tests will be given without documentation of the EMERGENCY.  A note from the health center saying that you did not "feel well" is not an emergency.  Make-up tests may increase in difficulty from the origonal.

I am unable to extend Aplia assignments for some individuals and not others; therefore, there will be no make-ups for the Aplia assignments. 

Any student in the course who has a disability that may prevent him/her from fully demonstrating his/her abilities should contact me personally as soon as possible so we can discuss accommodations necessary to ensure full participation.

Any student who will miss a class in which an assignment is due or a test is to be taken due to the observance of religious holiday must notify me at least one week prior to the date of the class missed to avoid late or to receive a makeup test.

 

Goals and Objectives of the Students

The goals and objectives of this course focus on what you the student should be able to do once you have completed this course. The main goal is the following: students can think effectively for themselves about economic issues. Additional goals are the following:

Be able to gather relevant factual information and apply it to the problem

Be able to evaluate potential bias in the information selected.

Be able to identify, construct, and asses economic arguments.

Understand the logical connections between the facts, goals, and implicit assumptions to the economic problem.

Be able to evaluate the implication of the results and how the results will affect society.

Demonstrate knowledge of the experiences and contributions of the many groups that shape American society and culture and how their experiences shape their perspective and interpretations of economic issues.

Understand the impact of prejudicial exclusion, structural inequalities, and systemic oppression affect the solution and meaning of a given economic problem or situation.

Be able to critically asses cultural images that develop as a result of exclusion, inequalities, and economic oppression.

In addition to these goals, the following specific instructional objectives will be helpful for your study efforts:

1. Know basic terms.

2. Understand economic concepts and principles.

3. Apply economic principles to new situations.

4. Interpret economic data.

 

Erroneous Expectations of Economics

Many of you may believe that introductory economics will provide clear and irrefutable answers to socioeconomic problems. If you share this belief, this course will sadly disappoint you. This course cannot provide definitive answers for three reasons:

Rather than a set of answers ready to be taken off the shelf, economics is a way of thinking about problems. Economics is a process of straight thinking -- "thinking like an economist."

 

Helpful Expectations of Economics

(1) Economics is different from what you are accustomed to.

Previously you were required to learn concrete stuff -- memorize facts and/or specific experiences. Economics demands a higher more "formal" level of thinking. In this course, you will need to reason analytically about hypotheses, to manipulate mentally abstractions, to understand contrary-to-fact situations (i.e. hypothetical situations), and to understand counter-intuitive results.

(2) Beware that economic concepts are abstract.

Because economic concepts are abstract, they may appear esoteric and mystifying. However, economics requires abstract concepts in order to develop a strong framework of analysis that is flexible enough to apply to various scenarios in numerous settings.

(3) Economics requires a different approach to learning.

Since the essence of economics is analysis, you cannot simple memorize stuff. You must practice the art of developing the economic framework of analysis and applying it to a broad field of subjects. In other words, you must "rehearse" the framework of analysis, not solely by remembering it but by examining its logical structure and applying it.

(4) Avoid acquiring inert knowledge.

Unless you can apply knowledge it is useless. Thus, exams will require you to apply knowledge to new situations. Do not expect to simply regurgitate facts on the exams.

(5) Stress the process of problem solving.

By stressing the process of problem solving, you will be better able to transfer economic concepts to other contexts, classes, and future employment.

 

Economics 100

Date Topic   Modified Topics Readings Homework Notes  
8/23 Mon   Introduction to Class and Aplia   1   Chapter 1   Chapter 1 Notes  
8/25
Wed
  Basic Principles of Economics 2       Chpt 1 PP  
8/27
Fri
The Costs and Benefits of Holding a Job, How Much Do I Need to Be Happy, What is the Difference Between Self Interest and Greed   3         Welch&Welch
NCEE Ethics
8/30

Mon
Thinking Like an Economist: The Circular Flow Model 4   Chapter 2   Chpt 2 Notes  
9/1
Wed
  Production Possibilities 5          
9/3
Fri
  Comparative Advantage 6   Chapter 3   Chpt 3 Notes  
9/6
Mon
Labor Day            
9/8
Wed
  Demand 7   Chapter 4   Chpt 4 Notes  
9/10
Fri
  Sex, booze, drugs, and water   8 FRIDAY we will meet in a different classroom
8:30--LO 90
11:30--MA 169
12:20--LO 90

You will also notice that I pushed back the due date on some assignments
       
9/13
Mon
  Supply   9          
9/15
Wed

 Equilibrium

10        
9/17
Fri

  Supply and Demand--The future of oil

11          
9/20
Mon

  Midterm I

12          
9/22
Wed
Price Floors and Ceiling are they good or bad 13   Chapter 6   Chpt 6 Notes
 
9/24
Fri
    Health Care and Prescription Drugs 14 FRIDAY we will meet in a different classroom
8:30--LO 90
11:30--MA 169
12:20--LO 90
       
9/27
Mon
The Economics of Education   15          
9/29
Wed
  Externalities   16   Chapter 10   Chpt 10 Notes  
10/1
Fri
Pollution--Must We Foul Our Own Nests 17 FRIDAY we will meet in a different classoom
all classes will meet in Library 222
    Public Goods  
10/4
Mon
Production and the Costs 18   Chapter 12   Chpt 12 Notes
 
10/6
Wed
Competition and Market Structure 19   Chapter 13   Chpt 13 Notes  
10/8
Fri
  Big Business--Who Does What to Whom    20          
10/11
Mon
Fall Breather            
10/13
Wed
   Labor Markets 21          
10/15
Fri
  Poverty--Why Are There So Many Still So Poor?   22          
10/18
Mon
  Review  23          
10/20
Wed
  Midterm II   24          
10/22
Fri
GDP--Is it all good?

and Investment Coordination Experiment
25   Chapter 15   Chpt 15 Notes  
10/25
Mon
  G & P II  26          
10/27
Wed
 CPI 27   Chapter 15   Chpt 16 Notes  
10/29
Fri
   Inflation--How To Gain And Lose At The Same Time  

and

CPI Experiment  
28          
11/1
Mon
The Financial System 29   Chapter 18   Chpt 18 Notes  
11/3
Wed
  Financial System II 30          
11/5
Fri
 The Current Economic Crisis
and Real vs Nominal Experiment
31        
11/8
Mon
   Unemployment--Why Do We Waste Our Labor Resources
and
Unemployment Experiment
32   Chapter 20   Chpt 20 Notes  
11/10
Wed
Economic Growth--Are We Living in a "New Economy" 33  
STUDY GUIDE FOR TEST III    
11/12
Fri
   Review 34          
11/15
Mon
  Midterm III 35          
11/17
Wed
   Government Spending, Taxes, and the National Debt--Who Wins? 36          
11/19
Fri
  Role of the Government 37          
11/22
Mon
The Wizard of OZ 38  

 

  Comprehensive Questions  
11/24
Wed
Thanksgiving         Final Study Guide  
11/26
Fri
Thanksgiving            
11/29
Mon
Money
and Money as a Medium Experiment
39   Chapter 21   Chpt 21 Notes  
12/1
Wed
  The Fed 40          
12/3
Fri
  Monetary Policy

and
Fed Funds Experiment
 
41          
12/6
Mon
Review

and
Lucus Experiment
42          
12/8
Wed
Study Day