{"title":"The Longitudinal Effects of Economic Education on Teachers and Their Students","authors":"Sam Allgood, W. Walstad","doi":"10.1080/00220489909595946","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Teacher education in economics is essential if high school students are to have an opportunity to learn economics. Teachers need to develop a solid understanding of economics through course work because students cannot be expected to learn what teachers do not know. In fact, research in economic education at the high school level has found that the number of economics courses taken by teachers has a positive and consistently significant effect on the economic learning of students (Becker, Greene, and Rosen 1990; Bosshardt and Watts 1990). For most teachers, however, the amount of course work in economics is limited. Studies of teacher education programs at colleges and universities show that most prospective social studies teachers (the ones most likely to teach economics in the schools) take about four college credit hours of course work in economics, and only 11 states have specific requirements for course work in economics for teacher certification (Walstad 1992). Although some teachers can correct deficiencies in their economic education by taking in-service courses and workshops, these programs are of short duration and often limit content coverage to the level of a one-semester principles course. Taking just one or two courses in economics is inadequate preparation in the view of a distinguished national committee of economists and educators that","PeriodicalId":51564,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Economic Education","volume":"1 1","pages":"99-111"},"PeriodicalIF":1.7000,"publicationDate":"1999-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"73","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Economic Education","FirstCategoryId":"96","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/00220489909595946","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"经济学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"ECONOMICS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 73
Abstract
Teacher education in economics is essential if high school students are to have an opportunity to learn economics. Teachers need to develop a solid understanding of economics through course work because students cannot be expected to learn what teachers do not know. In fact, research in economic education at the high school level has found that the number of economics courses taken by teachers has a positive and consistently significant effect on the economic learning of students (Becker, Greene, and Rosen 1990; Bosshardt and Watts 1990). For most teachers, however, the amount of course work in economics is limited. Studies of teacher education programs at colleges and universities show that most prospective social studies teachers (the ones most likely to teach economics in the schools) take about four college credit hours of course work in economics, and only 11 states have specific requirements for course work in economics for teacher certification (Walstad 1992). Although some teachers can correct deficiencies in their economic education by taking in-service courses and workshops, these programs are of short duration and often limit content coverage to the level of a one-semester principles course. Taking just one or two courses in economics is inadequate preparation in the view of a distinguished national committee of economists and educators that
如果高中生有机会学习经济学,经济学教师教育是必不可少的。教师需要通过课程作业培养对经济学的扎实理解,因为不能指望学生学习教师不知道的东西。事实上,对高中经济教育的研究发现,教师所修经济学课程的数量对学生的经济学习具有积极且持续的显著影响(Becker, Greene, and Rosen 1990;Bosshardt and Watts 1990)。然而,对大多数教师来说,经济学课程的工作量是有限的。对学院和大学教师教育项目的研究表明,大多数未来的社会研究教师(最有可能在学校教授经济学的人)大约需要四个大学学分的经济学课程,只有11个州对教师资格认证的经济学课程有具体要求(Walstad 1992)。尽管一些教师可以通过参加在职课程和研讨会来纠正他们在经济教育方面的不足,但这些课程的持续时间很短,而且通常将内容覆盖范围限制在一个学期的原理课程的水平上。一个由杰出的经济学家和教育家组成的全国委员会认为,只上一两门经济学课程是不够的
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.