Online
Course Description
For
ECO 201 O4B & O5B
Summer 2008
Principles
of Macro-Economics with Jim Roberts
Course
Pace & Expectations
All students should expect to take three exams, complete two research
paper writing assignments, and take all of the quizzes (17 of them)
in order to be successful with this course. Students are expected to
view multimedia presentations (known as "take-home lectures"
from cd or online), take quizzes, and contribute to discussions that
occur asynchronously. I will be tracking
your pace this semester by monitoring your scores on the quizzes -and
the dates on which the quizzes were taken. My intention is to keep all
of you up to the pace that I recommend for this course by way of the
course reading schedule: this is NOT a self-paced course!
It is evident to me that the greatest challenge that this course presents
does not relate to technical skills or to comprehending the mysteries
of economics, but rather in managing the freedom to procrastinate that
most online courses offer. While the course does indeed offer flexibility
to your schedule (and mine), it is wise to limit one's use of it. Please
stay in touch with me with your concerns or challenges as they arise.
I'm here for you all semester at jroberts@tcc.edu or 757 822-7316.
Quizzes
Quiz scores contribute half of the 400 base points in this course.
Quizzes are based upon the reading and online material for each unit of
the course, focusing largely on terminology and fundamental skills.
You'll do well on quizzes simply by keeping up with the reading and keeping
pace with the take-home lectures that Imake available on cd and online.
Quizzes are great preparation for the exams, and should be considered
primary exam review material. You may take each quiz as many times
as you like until you are content with your understanding of the material
and your scores on them. There are no time limitations with quizzes,
but there is a closing date for each after which you will not be able
to access it. Closing dates are posted on the course schedule at http://www.tcc.edu/faculty/webpages/jroberts/eco/201/
Exams
Exams
are really just big quizzes –similar both in content and in format.
With each exam, however, there is only one attempt permitted and 90 minutes
permitted for that attempt. There will be 40 possible points to score
with each of three non-comprehensive exams. This means that exam
scores constitute 30% of the 400 base points. You’ll have nearly
a one-week “window” to take one attempt at each exam. At the end
of that week, the exam is no longer available: don’t miss THIS boat!
Each exam may be taken with open books and
notes, but ONLY from a computer with an "always-on" connection:
not dial-up. Any of TCC's four
campuses' open labs offer you this type of connection. With such a connection,
many students (including active duty military) have completed this course
from foreign locations with no problems. I
do not restrict my students to testing at the proctored testing
centers on our TCC campuses. Because I test using random selection of
questions from question pools organized by topic, different students will
not get all the same questions on their exams.
Attendance & In-Person
Exam Reviews
Because many of my students
are out of state, overseas, or facing very erratic work schedules, I do
not require any physical attendance in my online courses. Still, you are
all invited to attend the optional exam review sessions this summer. I
have scheduled all of them for Thursday evenings at 7pm in room B-207
of the Virginia Beach campus. At these meetings, I'll use about 90 minutes
of your time to review the most essential points, then turn the meeting
over to you for Q&A. This summer, we'll review just as each of the
3 exams opens. Exam 1 Review: June 12th, Exam 2 Review: July
3rd, and Exam 3 Review: July 24th.
Writing Assignment
One research paper makes up 20% of the course score, or 80 points on a
400-point scale. The 700-word-minimum "paper" will be submitted
electronically as an email attachment. I expect a college-level
research effort and MLA-style citation of sources. I provide more detail
(and offer personal guidance) with each writing assignment: see ASSIGNMENTS
in Blackboard. Late submissions are accepted with two points of 80 taken
off for each day late. I require students to submit a thesis statement
for their paper well before the deadline for the paper so that i may provide
guidance.
Discussion Board
Extra Credit
One feature of this course that calls for some established pace is the
discussion board. Starting about two weeks into the course (once students
have some basic "tools of analysis"), I will initiate asynchronous discussions
on course-related topics and invite you all to contribute to them for
extra credit. Our class discussion board will provide some community
to this course, and a good place to clarify your understanding of course
material -without fear of losing points for what you say.
I will award two points or more for each
substantive contribution to the discussions, so it IS possible to score
more than 400 points in this course. Don't contribute to earn points,
though: attempt to clearly express your ideas, and points will follow.
My hope is that all of you will leave this course well informed on current
economic issues and able to converse intelligently on economic matters.
Writing is an important part of gaining and demonstrating those strengths,
and I’ll reward you up to 40 points of extra credit for it.
Grades
Grades will be based upon a straight scale where 90% (360 points) or more
earns an “A”, 80% (320 points) is a minimum “B”, 70% (280 points) is a
minimum “C”, and 60% (240 points) is a minimum “D”. As you earn
your points, you can track them on the Blackboard (BB) Gradebook.
I don’t “give” grades –you earn them. That means that your grade
is based on performance only, and not how well we get along or agree on
issues. I encourage you all to express alternative viewpoints but
to remain respectful of others and their right to disagree!
How to Proceed
This course is a "talkie" -with audio
lectures and mainly still images. You probably already have the required software on your computer already. If not, you'll need to download
free audio/video software (Realplayer) as well as free
Adobe Acrobat Reader to view the images. Access (password), technical support, student email, library resources, and other common questions are answered at http://www.tcc.edu/students/DTLS/
-note the menu at left under "Distance Learning". Once you're familiar with your
"MyTCC" login and password AND you're enrolled, you'll routinely be
going to https://tcc.my.vccs.edu/ to
"take class".
Once you've arrived at the course homepage,
you should see several buttons on the left-hand side. By clicking
on "Take Home Lectures", you'll find the Course
Schedule, which is the gateway to the lecture presentations and instructional
material. Each of the fifteen learning units of the semester is listed
down the left column. By clicking on the word "one", you will go to the
detailed outline for unit one. Click on any of the underlined topics there
and go to the presentation on that topic. Click on the "lecture" button
at the bottom of each .pdf (image) file, and a short audio clip that corresponds
with the image will play. If you minimize the Realaudio box, the audio
file will play without obscuring the image. (Dates on the Course Schedule
are updated at the beginning of each semester.)
Textbook
The
textbook
for ECO 201 is ECONOMICS by McConnell
& Brue, 17th ed. ISBN #978-0-07-312663-0. You will NOT need
the glitzy dvd that the publisher tries to sell with the textbook. Sources
for purchasing this textbook include the TCC (Barnes & Noble) bookstores
and:
Amazon
http://www.amazon.com/
Barnes & Noble
Join at: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/textbooks/index.asp
Half.com is strongly recommended by students.
It is now owned by EBay, so your EBay ID and password (if you have one
already) will work on this site. http://www.half.com/textbooks
A great meta-search for this textbook can be
found at http://www.addall.com/ A meta-search will search all known sources
for textbooks. Half.com is the source rated most highly by students. Now
that this company has been purchased by EBay, your EBay ID and password
will work with this site. http://www.half.com/
You'll be seeking to purchase at least the
textbook itself (17th ed: ISBN#978-0-07-312663-0), but are encouraged
to purchase either the workbook or the interactive cd-rom along with it.
Neither the workbook nor the cd-rom (nor any other ancillaries) are required.
Purchasing both the workbook and cd-rom is unnecessary.
An identical paperback textbook
by the same authors is available as "The International Edition",
and it sells for a much lower price just because it is marketed outside
of the United States. Still, it may be available from the sources above
at a fraction of the price of the regular textbook! The ISBN # of the
International Edition is 978-007-126594-2.
Please stay in touch this semester. Bon Voyage!
...............................Jim
Roberts
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