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There is a dire need for a comprehensive pedagogical resource both on diverse approaches to teaching sports economics and the use of sports to teach broader principles of economic concepts. This book does exactly that. The contributions from leading scholars and teachers in both fields will help all instructors looking to raise their teaching game.The pedagogy in this book covers a wide array of active and engaged teaching techniques to demonstrate interesting ways to engage students and to get them excited about sports economics and economic concepts in general. Chapters cover topics such as legal case studies that impact North American leagues, discrimination and gender bias in sports economics and best practices for supervising undergraduate student research. The innovative approaches and methods presented are applicable to both small and large class sizes. Practical advice for designing field trip-, guest speaker-, and case-study-based classes, and techniques for using data-driven exercises, film and straightforward classroom experiments are included.This book will appeal to two primary audiences: undergraduate economics instructors and sports economics/management instructors. The teaching methods may be easily adapted to most economic classes, and the breadth of material provides instructors with assistance in creating course syllabi, outlining teaching plans, generating student interest, and increasing the efficacy of their pedagogy.
Edited by Victor A. Matheson, Professor of Economics, Department of Economics and Accounting, College of the Holy Cross and Aju J. Fenn, Professor of Economics, Economics and Business Department, Colorado College, US
Contents:Introduction to Teaching Sports Economics and Using Sports toTeach Economics xiVictor A. Matheson and Aju J. FennPART I USING SPORTS TO TEACH ECONOMICS1 Integrating sports into economics teaching 2John J. Siegfried and Allen R. Sanderson2 Using sports-related empirical research to teach criticalreading skills in intermediate microeconomics 34Peter von Allmen3 Using ESPN 30 for 30 to teach economics – revisited 49Abdullah Al-Bahrani and Darshak Patel4 Uncovering bias: using sports to teach about the economicsof discrimination 65Jill S. Harris5 Supervising sports economics research 79Brad R. Humphreys and Jane E. RuseskiPART II TEACHING SPORTS ECONOMICS6 Using guest speakers and day trips to teach sports economics 94Aju J. Fenn7 Sports and the law: using court cases to teach sports economics 103Victor A. Matheson8 Making sports economics inclusive: why you aren’tteaching sports economics well if women are not part ofyour story 128David Berri9 Incorporating media into the sports economics curriculum 165Jadrian WootenPART III CLASSROOM ACTIVITIES FOR SPORTSECONOMICS – MOVING AWAY FROMCHALK AND TALK10 The jigsaw reading 181Victor A. Matheson11 Starting point bias and final offer arbitration: a classroomexperiment 188Victor A. Matheson12 Randomness and the hot hand fallacy 195Joshua Congdon-Hohman and Victor A. Matheson13 This class is a Kahoot! Using Kahoot! to test studentknowledge in class 200Jadrian Wooten14 Arbitration in the classroom: a classroom experiment tomodel MLB’s salary arbitration 208Amber Brown15 Measuring productivity in Major League Baseball 226Stacey Brook16 Teaching marginal revenue product using Moneyball 235Dustin White and Jadrian Wooten17 Economical sports economics classroom activities 241Rodney FortIndex