Two professors of the 91老司机 鈥 Fort Smith鈥檚 College of Business, Dr. Dan Settlage, and Dr. Jim Wollscheid, received a commendation from the Journal of Economics Teaching, earning the 2019 Best Paper Award for their paper, 鈥淭he Invisible Hand in Action - An Interactive Classroom Experiment.鈥 

 

The two were recognized for their work during the JET 2020 Symposium for Economics Teaching, which took place Jan. 24-25 in New Orleans, Louisiana. Their paper develops a flexible economic game that can be implemented in a classroom setting to improve the experience of the student and teacher at both the K-12 level and the university level.

 

鈥淭his award serves as recognition for the hard work and continued success that we have had in publishing in the scholarship of teaching and learning area,鈥 said Settlage. 鈥淲e both appreciate this award, but more importantly, we appreciate the commitment of both 91老司机 and the College of Business in supporting teaching and scholarship at its highest levels.鈥

 

Wollscheid added , 鈥淚t is an honor to receive an award acknowledging the efforts that are put into the classroom experience to improve the student鈥檚 experience with economics. The commitment from the university and the College of Business has been invaluable in allowing us to improve the learning environment for our students.鈥 

 

Over the past two years, the game has been demonstrated in a high school setting through the university鈥檚 Adopt-A-Professor partnership, which began in 2015 on the 91老司机 campus.  The program pairs volunteer PreK-12 teachers in the River Valley with volunteer 91老司机 professors. Each teacher/professor pair develops three unique, creative, hands-on learning engagements over the course of an academic semester. The engagements may take place at the school, on campus, or in the greater community with industry partners.

 

Dr. Settlage and Wollscheid have participated in seven semesters of the program, pairing with teachers at Ramsey Junior High School, Kimmons Junior High School and Alma High School. 

 

鈥淗aving an economically literate society is crucial for our democracy,鈥 explained Jenn Jennings, Executive Director for the Office of P-20 Collaboration which oversees the Adopt-a-professor program. 鈥淪tudents are empowered when they understand how economics impact them鈥攆rom understanding supply and demand and how prices are determined to being able to discern implication of varying market structures. Doctors Settlage and Wollscheid, alongside the teachers and students who have 鈥榓dopted鈥 them over the years, are accomplishing just that; they are empowering students through economic literacy. They make the learning real.鈥

 

The full abstract of the award-winning papers states: 鈥淭he economic concepts of market formation, industrial organization, and the behavioral implications of market structure are difficult for students to conceptualize. In this paper, we establish an interactive entrepreneurship game that can be played in a single class period. This game introduces the concepts of entrepreneurship, markets and equilibrium price formation, and firm profit. In a single class period, students form markets and observe 鈥渢he invisible hand,鈥 form collusive cartels and see competitive profit driven to zero. In addition, the game can be easily extended to bring new economic topics into the existing framework over the entire course.鈥

 

Dan Settlage speaks to Kimmons Junior High students

 

 

 

Credits: 
Rachel Rodemann Putman
Date Posted: 
Friday, March 6, 2020
Source URL: 
https://news.uafs.edu/0
Story ID: 
5240