Do Economics Courses Improve Students' Analytical Skills? A Difference-in-Difference Estimation

Seife Dendir, A. Orlov, John Roufagalas
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Abstract

To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study that provides robust empirical support to the claim that exposure to economics training improves students' analytical skills and problem-solving abilities. We rely on Frederick's (2005) Cognitive Reflection Test (CRT) to measure these skills and abilities. The original CRT served as a pre-test, and a CRT-clone was administered as a post-test in a number of classes across various majors at a comprehensive, medium-sized university. Difference-in-difference estimation is used to assess the difference in CRT score improvements between economics and non-economics classes. Our main result shows that students in economics classes improve their analytical skills during the semester by between 7 and 11 percentage points more than those in non-economics classes. We also find that most of this effect is attributable to the economics principles courses. The results remain robust as we vary the number of control variables, the size of the sample and the estimation method, and are nearly always statistically significant at either 1% or 5% level.
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经济学课程能提高学生的分析能力吗?差中差估计
据我们所知,这是第一个为经济学培训能提高学生的分析技能和解决问题能力这一说法提供有力实证支持的研究。我们依靠弗雷德里克(2005)的认知反射测试(CRT)来衡量这些技能和能力。原始的CRT作为前测,克隆CRT作为后测,在一所综合性中型大学的多个专业的班级中进行。差中差估计用于评估经济学和非经济学课程在CRT分数改进方面的差异。我们的主要结果表明,经济学课程的学生在学期中比非经济学课程的学生提高了7到11个百分点的分析能力。我们还发现,这种影响大部分归因于经济学原理课程。当我们改变控制变量的数量、样本的大小和估计方法时,结果仍然是稳健的,并且在1%或5%的水平上几乎总是具有统计显著性。
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