INTRODUCTION AND GENERAL COURSE INFORMATION

 

COURSE

Microeconomics: ECON% 201

QUARTER

Winter 2012

INSTRUCTOR

Hubert

OFFICE

Room 301 Fine Arts Building (SE corner Harvard and Pine)

PHONE

587 2037 (Office)

E-MAIL

James.Hubert@seattlecolleges.edu

J.HUBERT

HOMEPAGE

http://www.SeattleCentral.edu/faculty/jhubert

 

ECONOMICS

HOMEPAGE

Economics Homepage

 

OFFICE HOURS

Fine Arts Building:

MTThF

10:00 to 10:40

7:15 to 7:35 by request

Wednesdays:  online

TEXTBOOKS

Microeconomics: The Economic Way of Thinking, Paul Heyne, 5th Edition or

Microeconomics: The Economic Way of Thinking, Paul Heyne, SCCC Edition

SUPPLEMENTAL

READINGS (as assigned)

Web Sited Supplemental Readings

 

Wall Street Journal **

 


 

* Note: Principles of Microeconomics, ECON& 201, satisfies the Quantitative/Symbolic Reasoning requirement for the A.A. degree.

** A reduced price ($19.95) student subscription is available.

 

ECONOMICS

 "The Theory of Economics does not furnish a body of settled conclusions immediately applicable to policy. It is a method rather than a doctrine, an apparatus of the mind, a technique of thinking which helps its possessor to draw correct conclusions."

 

John Maynard Keynes

 

"But the age of chivalry is gone. That of sophisters, economists, and calculators, has succeeded; and the glory of Europe is extinguished forever."

 

                Edmund Burke, Reflections on the Revolution in France, 1790

 

Economics as an "engine for the discovery of concrete truth."

 

                Alfred Marshall, "The Present Position of Economics" (1885)

 

Economics is the study of how to best allocate scarce resources among competing uses: guns or butter types of questions.

 

                Typical textbook definition

MICROECONOMICS, ECON& 201

Economics 201, a microeconomics course, focuses on the activities of individual units within the economy - the firm and the individual consumer. Topics to be discussed include: scarcity, supply and demand, the market mechanism, prices, factors of production, the theory of the firm, and a variety of current issues such as minimum wage laws, rent control, pollution, divorce and abortion. In this course we will attempt to relate economic theory to the real world - the world of people and businesses making decisions.

EDUCATIONAL PHILOSOPHY AND COURSE GOALS:

My educational philosophy is reflected in the course goals/objectives for my macroeconomics course:

1.  To achieve a fundamental understanding of microeconomic theory, concepts and terminology.

2.  To be able to interpret and analyze economic data (employing quantitative methods).

3.  To develop an independent ability to apply economic tools (including quantitative methods) in critical thinking about a variety of issues.

4.  To develop an understanding of social interactions, implications and responsibility.

5.  To be able to utilize collective resources (seminar and study groups) to identify and analyze issues and solve problems.

6.  To be prepared for advanced economic courses.

 The primary goal of my introductory economics courses is to enable students to apply "the economic way of thinking." Thinking like an economist involves using chains of deductive reasoning in conjunction with simplified models. The learning (rather than teaching) process involves the application of a limited number of important concepts and economic tools to examine relevant real world issues and problems.

 The initial, and possibly the most important, step in this process is to make economics fun (or at least interesting). It is my contention that, far from being a dry, dismal science, economics provides students with the tools necessary to critically examine issues and make sound decisions...skills necessary to function in any society. John Maynard Keynes summarized this notion well:
 

"It is this ability to readily utilize economic theory in the analysis of real world issues that makes its study fun."

 

The emphasis in my classes is on analysis. This approach tends to challenge my students. To quote R. Jackson Wilson, Professor of History at Smith College:
 

"Students come to us having sat around for twelve years expressing attitudes toward things rather than analyzing. They are always ready to tell you how they feel about an issue, but they have never learned how to construct a rational argument to defend their opinions."

 

Consider the following wisdom regarding the role of the academician in both the learning and maturation process:

 

"During those confusing times, as the events of the 1960s and my maelstrom of swirling emotions pulled me toward the abyss of permanent animus, any number of my professors pulled me back or at least kept me from going over the brink. They refused to accommodate my feelings; they demanded that I think rather than feel."

 

Justice Clarence Thomas in IMPRIMIS, Hillsdale College, Volume 3, Number 26

 

Ethics deals with morality and I would contend that capitalism is an amoral economic model. *

 

Business Administration Program Review 2002

Comment from committee regarding the philosophy that capitalism is as ethical as any other system…

 

* Note: We will spend some time addressing this rather thoughtless comment.

 

I feel strongly that my college transfer courses must be taught at the same level of rigor and content as comparable courses at four-year institutions. To do less penalizes our transfer students.

My courses combine traditional lectures with a host of other approaches including small group work, short individual and group presentations, and current events from the Wall Street Journal and other publications.

A significant portion of time is allocated to the analysis of contemporary issues. We enjoy confronting conventional wisdom. For example, consider the myths regarding the benefits of minimum wage laws, economic theory - and empirical evidence, strongly supports the notion that minimum wage laws hurt the poor…more precisely, poor young black males.

Learning economics requires application, application, and more application. Society frequently allocates scarce resources through the application of chance, so we sometimes select student presenters by utilizing a random number generator. On occasion, resources are allocated through force (remember the Gulf War, the Peloponnesian War, the Mexican-American War, the War of 1812, and so forth). In this class, I have been known to utilize arm wrestling as an allocation mechanism.

 

Consider the following disclaimer of Rene Descartes, circa 1625:
 

"At the same time, recalling my insignificance, I affirm nothing, but submit all these opinions to the authority of the Catholic Church, and to the judgment of the more sage; and I wish no one to believe anything I have written, unless he is personally persuaded by the evidence of reason."

 

I share Descartes concern regarding persuasion: I wish no one to believe anything presented in this class unless he or she is personally persuaded by the evidence of reason."

 

METHODS OF INSTRUCTION:

The hybrid nature of this class will include both traditional classroom and web-based settings. (The hybrid structure is a work-in-process, which will be modified with student feedback over the quarter.):

CLASSROOM SETTING:

Lecture and collaborative techniques: I combine traditional lectures with a host of other approaches including small group work, short individual and group presentations, and current events from the Wall Street Journal, New York Times and other publications.

Lectures will incorporate PowerPoint technology.

Note: Participation is required to successfully negotiate the course and earn a passing grade.

 

HYBRID COMPONENT WEB-BASED SETTING:

The Wednesday time-slot will be allocated to Internet web-based activities including a variety of Google tools. Student study groups will use Google-based web sites containing readings and assignments; Google-chat will allow groups to discuss readings and prepare consensus responses. Consensus responses may be presented in the classroom setting as well. Web-based exams will be used to maximize classroom time.

 

An economic reading example:

 http://seattlecentral.edu/faculty/jhubert/commonsense.html

 

COURSE MATERIALS:

http://seattlecentral.org/faculty/jhubert/economics.html

COURSE PREREQUISITES:

MAT 098 (Intermediate Algebra) and ENG 101 (recommended)

STUDY AND SEMINAR GROUPS:

Study groups will be organized to address and analyze a variety of economic issues. Active participation is encouraged.

HOMEWORK:

Short (one or two pages) homework papers may be periodically assigned during the quarter. Homework papers will be due at the beginning of class period on the date due.

QUIZZES AND EXAMS:

There will be a short quiz every Friday, beginning on January 6th.  (Since we all tend to have "off" days or miss the occasional class because of sickness or some other legitimate reason, only the highest 6 quiz grades will be included in the grading algorithm.)

Two exams have been tentatively scheduled: a midterm exam on Friday, February 10th and a final exam on Friday, March 16th. A post-exam review session is scheduled for 8:00 am, Monday, March 19th.

Note: Test times and dates are inviolate, that is, alternative test dates or times will not be scheduled.

GRADING: *

Exams (2)        200 points total
Quizzes (6)     120 points total
Participation    to be determined **
Homework        to be determined **

-------------------------------------------------

Total 320 points plus possible ad hoc homework and participation points.

* Subject to revision

** To be determined at the time of assignment.

NOTE: All homework must be completed in order to receive a passing grade.
 
 

GRADING MATRIX *

Grade*

Minimum % of total points

3.5

91 %

2.7

77 %

1.5

66 %

0.7

51 %

0.0

Less than 51 %

* Approximation only

READINGS:

Additional readings will be assigned on an ad hoc basis. Reading assignments (textbooks and supplemental) represent your main learning tools. Please do your reading when it is assigned. Lectures will cover important and/or difficult topics and will assume that you have done the reading assignment.

Ultimately you will be responsible for the topics assigned whether discussed in lecture or not. Note: New material may be introduced in lectures. You will be held accountable for both readings and lectures.

COURSE SYLLABUS (Very Tentative)

WEEK

TEXTBOOK CHAPTER

1

1 The Economic Way of Thinking &

2 Substitutes Everywhere: the concept of demand

2

3 Opportunity Cost and the Supply of Goods &

4 Supply and Demand: a process of cooperation

3

5 Supply and Demand: issues and applications &

6 Efficiency, Exchange, and Comparative Advantage

4

7 Information, Middlemen, and Speculators

5

Midterm Exam, Friday, February 10th

6

8 Price Setting and the Question of Monopoly &

9 Price Searching

7

10 Competition and Government Policy &

11 Profit

8

12 The Distribution of Income

9

13 Externalities and Conflicting Rights

10

14 Markets and Government &

15 The Limitations of Economics

11

Final Exam: 8:00 A.M., Friday, March 16th

* Post-Exam Review: 8:00 am, Monday, March 19th

 

* Final exams will be returned and correct answers will be discussed. Students have the option to contest their final exam answers, in writing, by 8:00 a.m. the following day.  Arguments and exams are due in my office in room 301 Fine Arts Building.

 

NOTES:

a. If you need course adaptations or accommodations because of a disability; if you have emergency medical information to share with me; or you need special arrangements in case the building must be evacuated; please make an appointment with me as soon as possible.

b. District regulations prohibit children in the classroom.

c. College regulations prohibit food or beverages in the classroom.

d. Academic dishonesty will not be condoned in my classes. Note: Cheating is punishable by expulsion from the class.

e. Cell phones and beepers are to be turned-off prior to entering the classroom.

f. All submissions, including ad hoc quizzes, etc., must be submitted on 8 by 11 paper - without chads.