{"title":"检验新手对市场均衡变化理解的计算机辅助练习","authors":"A. Katz","doi":"10.1080/00220489909595952","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The difficulties of teaching introductory principles of comparative statics equilibrium analysis are well known, and failures to grasp their essentials often leave beginning students with a weak foundation for studies of other topics in economics. In this article, I describe a computer-aided supplement to the introductory microeconomics course that enhances students' understanding with simulation-based tools for reviewing what they have learned from lectures and conventional textbooks about comparing market equilibria. The heart of the method is an exercise that asks students to predict the consequences of supply and demand shifts by constructing statements of the form \"If X increases (or decreases), then Y increases (or decreases)\" where the X and Y variables are chosen from a menu including variables such as income, population, demand, supply, equilibrium price, equilibrium quantity, and so forth. The if-then statements are an alternative to the usual textbook way of describing equilibrium market changes, forcing students to translate what they have learned into a somewhat different format from the more traditional approaches. Although most students find the translations difficult, they typically show a dogged persistence in getting them right and, in the process, learn from their mistakes. The computer-based aids are essential to the way in which students have been doing the exercise in my classes-as an integral part of instructional software that I have been developing known as the Smithtown Collection. The collection derives from a laboratory prototype developed by cognitive psychologists (Shute, Glaser, and Raghavan 1989; Shute and Glaser 1990a, 1990b) who were interested in comparing computer-based learning in economics with other disciplines.' The exercise, adapted from the prototype, owes much to what psychologists have learned from studies of skill development, especially the importance of repetitive practice. Smithtown and my adaptations of it for classroom use have been described elsewhere (Katz and Ochs 1993; Katz 1992; Raghavan and Katz 1989), so I shall outline only those features that are directly relevant to understanding","PeriodicalId":51564,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Economic Education","volume":"105 1","pages":"148-162"},"PeriodicalIF":1.7000,"publicationDate":"1999-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"13","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"A Computer-Aided Exercise for Checking Novices' Understanding of Market Equilibrium Changes\",\"authors\":\"A. Katz\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/00220489909595952\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"The difficulties of teaching introductory principles of comparative statics equilibrium analysis are well known, and failures to grasp their essentials often leave beginning students with a weak foundation for studies of other topics in economics. 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引用次数: 13
摘要
教授比较静力学均衡分析入门原理的困难是众所周知的,如果不能掌握基本原理,往往会使初学的学生在学习其他经济学主题时基础薄弱。在这篇文章中,我描述了一个计算机辅助的微观经济学入门课程的补充,通过基于模拟的工具来提高学生的理解,以回顾他们从讲座和传统教科书中学到的关于比较市场均衡的知识。该方法的核心是一项练习,要求学生通过构建“如果X增加(或减少),那么Y增加(或减少)”的形式的陈述来预测供给和需求变化的后果,其中X和Y变量是从包括收入,人口,需求,供给,均衡价格,均衡数量等变量的菜单中选择的。if-then语句是描述均衡市场变化的常用教科书方式的另一种选择,它迫使学生将所学知识转化为与更传统的方法不同的格式。尽管大多数学生发现翻译很难,但他们通常会表现出顽强的毅力,以使他们正确,并在这个过程中,从错误中吸取教训。基于计算机的辅助工具对于学生们在我的课堂上做练习的方式是必不可少的——作为教学软件的一个组成部分,我一直在开发被称为史密斯敦集合。该系列源自认知心理学家开发的实验室原型(Shute, Glaser, and Raghavan 1989;Shute和Glaser(1990年a, 1990年b),他们对比较经济学和其他学科的计算机学习感兴趣。这个根据原型改编的练习,很大程度上归功于心理学家从技能发展研究中学到的东西,尤其是重复练习的重要性。史密斯镇和我对它的课堂应用的改编已经在其他地方描述过(Katz和Ochs 1993;Katz 1992;Raghavan和Katz 1989),所以我将只概述那些与理解直接相关的特征
A Computer-Aided Exercise for Checking Novices' Understanding of Market Equilibrium Changes
The difficulties of teaching introductory principles of comparative statics equilibrium analysis are well known, and failures to grasp their essentials often leave beginning students with a weak foundation for studies of other topics in economics. In this article, I describe a computer-aided supplement to the introductory microeconomics course that enhances students' understanding with simulation-based tools for reviewing what they have learned from lectures and conventional textbooks about comparing market equilibria. The heart of the method is an exercise that asks students to predict the consequences of supply and demand shifts by constructing statements of the form "If X increases (or decreases), then Y increases (or decreases)" where the X and Y variables are chosen from a menu including variables such as income, population, demand, supply, equilibrium price, equilibrium quantity, and so forth. The if-then statements are an alternative to the usual textbook way of describing equilibrium market changes, forcing students to translate what they have learned into a somewhat different format from the more traditional approaches. Although most students find the translations difficult, they typically show a dogged persistence in getting them right and, in the process, learn from their mistakes. The computer-based aids are essential to the way in which students have been doing the exercise in my classes-as an integral part of instructional software that I have been developing known as the Smithtown Collection. The collection derives from a laboratory prototype developed by cognitive psychologists (Shute, Glaser, and Raghavan 1989; Shute and Glaser 1990a, 1990b) who were interested in comparing computer-based learning in economics with other disciplines.' The exercise, adapted from the prototype, owes much to what psychologists have learned from studies of skill development, especially the importance of repetitive practice. Smithtown and my adaptations of it for classroom use have been described elsewhere (Katz and Ochs 1993; Katz 1992; Raghavan and Katz 1989), so I shall outline only those features that are directly relevant to understanding
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Economic Education offers original articles on teaching economics. In its pages, leading scholars evaluate innovations in teaching techniques, materials, and programs. Instructors of introductory through graduate level economics will find the journal an indispensable resource for content and pedagogy in a variety of media. The Journal of Economic Education is published quarterly in cooperation with the National Council on Economic Education and the Advisory Committee on Economic Education of the American Economic Association.