Principles of Microeconomics

ECON 2302 DIL--Asynchronous Distant Learning Syllabus

Internet Based

Instructor: James Sondgeroth

1st 5 week Summer session

May 30 - June 30

SUMMER 2023


DIL-Internet based asynchronous Distance Learning Section
synonym 63261, section 006

NOTE: This syllabus may undergo minor changes up to the first day of the semester. The syllabus as it stands on the first day of the semester will be the final arbiter of all questions about the course, its assignments, its due dates, and its grading methodology. Small changes to the syllabus as it now stands might be made before the first of the semester. If you download this syllabus a substantial time before the beginning of the semester, I encourage you to check back to see if there have been any changes, such as deadline changes or grading changes, the first few days of class.

The contents of the syllabus are listed below by Section and Sub-Section. All Sections and Sub-Sections listed are links to material internal to the syllabus or to documents outside the syllabus.

SECTION 1
Essential Course Information

  1. Textbook
  2. Blackboard
  3. ACC eID and Password
  4. Mandatory Orientation
  5. Exam Deadlines

SECTION 3
General Course Information

  1. Course Description
  2. Instructional Methodology
    1. Distance Learning
    2. Competency Based
  3. College & Departmental Goals for Course
  4. Instructor's Learning Objectives

SECTION 5
Assignments and Deadlines

  1. Due Dates for Chapter Assignments and Unit Exams
  2. Due Dates for All MyEconLab Assignments and Unit Exams
  3. Extra Credit Assignment Exams Deadlines
  4. Prerequisites for assignments and Unit Exams

SECTION 7
Testing

  1. Regular/Traditional Unit Exams
  2. Competency Based Unit Challenge Exams
  3. Final Exam
  4. Course Challenge Exam
  5. Respondus LockDown Browser and Monitor

SECTION 2
Contact Information

  1. Office Hours
  2. Messages-email and voicemail
  3. Blackboard Collaborate appointments

SECTION 4
Pearson MyEconLab & eText

  1. How to Sign Up for Pearson MyLab & eText
  2. MyEconLab Student Features
  3. MyEconLab Chapter Homework Assignments & Quizzes
  4. How to Best Use MyEconLab

SECTION 6
Grading

  1. Grading-Traditional Route
  2. Grading-Competency Based Route
  3. Extra Credit
  4. Withdrawals
  5. Incompletes
  6. Attendance

SECTION 8
Tips on Studying for Course

  1. Recommended Study Method
  2. Most Productive way to Read the Textbook
  3. How to Prepare for MyEconLab Assignments
  4. How to Prepare for Unit Exams
  5. Optional YouTube Videos

SECTION 9--College Policies

 

SECTION 1
Essential Course Information


Textbook + Pearson MyEconLab:

Required:

Economics Today: The Micro View plus MyEconLab plus eBook 1-semester Student Access Kit, 20/E, by Roger LeRoy Miller (Pearson, 2020). There are several alternatives/formats available.

If you have paid your tuition for this course and you have not opted out of the First Day Access textbook program, then you should already have access to this eText through the course's Blackboard site. Please see the instructions on how to access it SECTION 4.1 of this syllabus..

If you opt-out of the First Day Access program, then you will still need to purchase access to Pearson's MyEconLab to complete this course. If you are purchasing the textbook outside of the First Day Access program be careful. The cover of Economics Today: The Micro View is almost identical to the cover of Economics Today: The Macro View.

Here are your options if you opt out of the First Day Access program:

BUY AN ACCESS CODE FROM ACC'S BOOKSTORE:

  • Access Code for eText + MyEconLab = $119.99 + Tax = $129.89 approximately

*A rental Print Upgrade can be added to the above after registering for Pearson’s MyEconLab through Blackboard for $24.99. It will be shipped directly to your address at no additional cost.

DIRECT ONLINE PURCHASE: www.pearsonmylab.com (actual price accessed through Blackboard)

  • MyEconLab with eText (no hard copy of textbook): $99.99 + Tax = $108.24

*A rental Print Upgrade can be added to the above after registering for Pearson’s MyEconLab through Blackboard for $24.99. It will be shipped directly to your address at no additional cost

Back to Table of Contents

Blackboard:


Blackboard is an on-line classroom management tool. It includes a gradebook, an announcements page, and a facility for administering on-line tests and quizzes.

UNIT Exams and the Final Exam will be administered through Blackboard; and your course grades can be accessed through Blackboard.

You can review those grades by clicking on "My Grades" in the left navigation bar of Blackboard. Grades from the Pearson MyEconLab site will by automatically uploaded to the Blackboard gradebook.

In addition, important notifications and announcements will be posted and sent to the class from the Blackboard Announcement page. You should check the Announcement page of Blackboard frequently.

Blackboard's URL is http://acconline.austincc.edu. This is the URL for ACC's Blackboard site. Do not go to blackboard.com, the company's own site.

Back to Table of Contents

Don't Have an ACC eID and Password Yet? or Have Forgotten Them?

If you have not created your new ACC Username or Password through ACCeID Manager, then please go to this link: https://acceid.austincc.edu/idm/user/login.jsp. You can also use this link to recover your ACCeID and to reset a forgotten password.

Do not fill in your Username and Password on this page, since you have not activated your ACCeID yet.

DO CLICK on Activate your ACCeID.

Your ACCeID will be the first letter of your legal, given, first name and your seven digit ACC ID number. For example, fictional student John Keynes might have this Username j0067701.

Once you activate your ACC eID, just follow the instructions.

The first day students can access Blackboard is typically the day after regular registration ends.

Helpful Hint: Once you are logged into ACC's Blackboard site, the easiest way to navigate this course's Blackboard content is accessed by first clicking on the "Courses" tab in the upper right hand corner of the first Blackboard page that comes up. Then click on the name of the course: Course ID: 222U-63261-ECON 2302-006: Principles of Microeconomics. You are then taken to the course's main Blackboard page. It is much easier to find the "Start Here" link, the "Course Content" link, and the "MyEconLab" link by doing this than if you try to navigate from the very first page that comes up when you log onto Blackboard

Back to Table of Contents

Mandatory Orientation:

Orientation for this course is done by taking a quiz over the course's syllabus. That is the document you are reading right now.

This Orientation Quiz must be taken and submitted before you can take any of the exams. The quiz consists of 20 questions. Students must make an 80% or better on it in order to gain access to the UNIT I EXAM. This exam also has a corequisite of a 65% or better grade on the Chapter 4 MyEconLab Quiz.

The learning objectives for this quiz can be found by clicking on Mandatory Orientation Quiz on the course's ACC Blackboard site.

Your course's ACC Blackboard site can be found at http://acconline.austincc.edu

IMPORTANT:
A-->This quiz must be taken using a proctoring software provided by ACC. I require this so that you will become comfortable using this software right from the beginning and before a more stressful testing situation. More on the software can be found toward the end of this syllabus or by clicking on Respondus LockDown Browser and Monitor in the Table of Contents at the top of this syllabus.
B-->If it is not taken on or before Tuesday, June 7, you risk being withdrawn from this course for "non-attendance."

Back to Table of Contents

Deadlines for Exams

EXAM

Unit Covered

Chapters Covered

Exam Deadline for Extra Credit Points

Location of Exam

1

I

1, 2, 3, 4

June 7

Blackboard/Respondus

2

II

5, 19, 20, 21

June 14

Blackboard/Respondus

3

III

22, 23, 24, 25

June 21

Blackboard/Respondus

4

IV

26, 28, 31, 32

June 28

Blackboard/Respondus

Final

ALL

1-5, 19-26, 28, 31 & 32

June 30

Blackboard/Respondus

Learning Objectives for Chapters and Exams

All UNIT EXAMS will be available for re-testing on Blackboard through the last day of the semester if a student has met the prerequisites for taking it.

FINAL EXAM extra credit deadline is Friday, June 30.


• The Final Exam will remain available through Friday, June 30, which is the last day of the 1st Summer Session. Beware though! Since Exam 4 is a prerequisite for taking the Final Exam, a student couldn't take the initial attempt on Exam 4 at any time after 9 p.m. on Friday, June 30, and have any hope of taking the Final Exam the same day.
•The Final Exam can be re-taken once.
Back to Table of Contents

SECTION 2
Contact Information


Office Hours: How: May 31 - July 1
In Person By appointment
Internet Meeting by appointment Zoom, Google Meet, or Blackboard Collaborate
asynchronous: Email at any time, I will respond within 24 hours.
by phone: Call my office number M, T, W, or Th, leave a message, and I will return your call within 24 hours.

Office:

Rio Grande Campus(RGC)/3000 Building at 1218 West Ave. 78701

Rm. 3252

RGC Phone: 512-223-3390

Back to Table of Contents

Messages:

Please feel free to leave messages on Mr. Sondgeroth's ACC voice mail box at 512-223-3390. He will return the calls within 24 hours on M,T,W, and Th.

E-mail: jason@austincc.edu. Send at any time, and I will respond within 24 hours. Subject line must contain ECON 2302.63261.006.

Back to Table of Contents

Blackboard Collaborate-Virtual Office Hours:

Blackboard is the Learning Management System (LMS) ACC uses for all its courses. You will learn more about Blackboard below.

Blackboard Collaborate is a tool within Blackboard that will be used to hold virtual office hours by appointment if you cannot make it to my office for an appointment. We can meet virtually at a time convenient to us both or during my face-to-face office hours. Blackboard Collaborate is similar to Google Hangouts and Zoom. You will find a link to Blackboard Collaborate in the left navigation bar of Blackboard along with instructions on how to use it.

Virtual meetings with the instructor will be by appointment only. These appointments will be arranged and agreed to via email requests to the instructors email account: jason@austincc.edu--please include ECON 2302.63261.006 in the subject line.

Back to Table of Contents

SECTION 3
General Course Information


Course Description:

The purpose of this course is to familiarize you with the generally accepted principles of microeconomics. Microeconomics deals with the interactions between and among households and business firms; it deals with the process by which we make our living under conditions of free market capitalism. In studying this process, the concepts of supply and demand are introduced. You will learn what these concepts mean, how they operate, how prices are determined, and how scarce resources are allocated. The following topics are also likely to be considered: market structure, market failure, public choice theory (government regulatory failure), international trade, and income distribution.

Credit Hours: 3
Classroom Contact Hours per week: Two hours 40 minutes (if this were a 16 week lecture course. It is not; it is a Distance Learning course, so it has no scheduled classroom contact hours.)
Skills Requirement: G--Proficiency in Reading, Writing, and Math.
Course Type: T--Academic Transfer course as designated by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board.
Back to Table of Contents

Instructional Methodology I--Distance Learning:

This course is a competency based distance learning course. More can be found about what it means to be "competency based" below under the heading Grading and The Competency Based Education Model. Here I want to focus more on the "distant learning" nature of the course.

A distant learning course is similar but not identical to a self-paced course. It is similar in the sense that there will not be scheduled lectures in which an instructor will explain the material you are attempting to learn. Your understanding of the material will come mostly from reading the assigned readings and doing the assigned homework and quizzes on your own as would be done in a self-paced or correspondence course. The instructor will always be there to help explain difficult concepts and theories, and there are very helpful videos explaining the material embedded in the course. Indeed, some of my lectures for my face-to-face lecture course will be available where the topics covered are similar. But this does not make the course equivalent to a regularly scheduled lecture course which offers easy accessibility to the instructor and fellow students.

A distant learning course is different from a self-paced course in that it must be completed in a given time period. In this course's case, it must be completed during this semester. Because of this, there are deadlines for the homework assignments, quizzes, and exams. These are set to help ensure that students can complete the work in the time designated. However, it is like a self-paced course in that students can accelerate their pace and complete the course well before the end of the semester if they wish to do so. Students just cannot stretch the course out to last longer than a regular college semester.

In addition to not being able to listen to an instructor's explanation of the material and the lack of easy access to fellow students, time management problems can also make a distant learning course more difficult to complete than a traditional college lecture course. Not having to attend a regularly scheduled lecture can lead to procrastination problems. Setting a firm schedule for reading and studying is a must in distant learning courses. For more on how to study for this course, see the sections entitled Recommended Study Method and Reading found below in this syllabus.

For all the difficulties noted above, there are compensating benefits to taking a distant learning course. The most important one for most students is the flexibility it gives them in putting together a course schedule when they are faced with other obligations such as family and work but also with putting together a full load if they are a full time college student.. As such, distant learning courses can shorten the time it takes to complete a course of study and to get a degree. It can also save on transportation expenses, and it can spare students from having to listen to the unrelated personal stories and political opinions of the professor.

If you are uncertain if a distant learning course is for you, the College provides a couple of on-line quizzes that might help you decide if it is. You can take the Learning Style Survey and review the Technical Skills Checklist to find out if you are comfortable with the learning style required to be successful in an asynchronous distance learning environment.

The College also provides a very helpful FAQ page that answers many questions about distant learning courses at https://online.austincc.edu/faq/. Among the questions answered that are relevant to this course are:

TECHNOLOGY SUPPORT SERVICES:

In response to COVID-19-related campus closures, Austin Community College now provides free, secure drive-up WiFi to students and employees in the parking lots of all campus locations. WiFi can be accessed seven days a week, 7 am to 11 pm. Additional details are available at https://www.austincc.edu/coronavirus/drive-up-wifi. Students who submit the Student Technology Access Form and indicate they need help accessing their online learning environment to successfully complete their courses are eligible to check out an ACC iPad for use during the semester. You must be registered for a credit course, Adult Education, or Continuing Education course. For more information, including how to request a device, visit http://www.austincc.edu/sts.

Free WiFi access is also available to students anywhere on any ACC campus during hours of operation.

Back to Table of Contents

Instructional Methodology II--Competency Based:

This is a Competency Based Education course. That means that the grades assigned will be based on the mastering the UNITS (Competencies) in the course. Once students have shown mastery of one UNIT (or competency), they may move on to the next UNIT. UNIT Challenge Exams are available in the Challenge Exam folder on the course's Blackboard site for each of the four UNITS (Competencies).

The Challenge Exams are optional; students can ignore them and start the MyEconLab assignments in each UNIT if they so desire. One attempt will be allowed for each UNIT Challenge Exam AND it must be taken in a secure setting using Respondus Lock Down Browser and Respondus Monitor (you will find more details about this in the course's ACC Blackboard site. From the left navigation column in Blackboard, follow this sequence of links: Course Content/Challenge Exams/Instructions on how to use Respondus LockDown Browser and Monitor).

If a grade of 80% or better is made on a UNIT Challenge Exam, then a student may move on to the next UNIT without completing the MyEconLab assignments in the UNIT for which the UNIT Challenge Exam was taken. If a grade of less than 80% is made on a UNIT Challenge Exam, then students will have to move through each the MyEconLab assignments in the UNIT in the order they are assigned. After students have completed these assignments with a 65% or better grade on them, they will be able to take the UNIT Exam. Three attempts will be allowed on each UNIT Exam without the instructor's permission--an initial test and two re-tests. The highest score is used for grading purposes. These exams must be taken using Respondus Lock Down Browser and Monitor on your Internet connected computer at home.

Students must make a 65% or better on a UNIT Exam to move on to the next UNIT Challenge Exam OR the next UNIT MyEconLab assignments and UNIT EXAM. If more than three attempts are needed to make a 65%, students must set up an appointment with the professor to discuss the difficulties they are having with the UNIT Exam. Once a UNIT Exam has been passed with a 65% or better, the process will repeat itself on the next UNIT/Competency.

A student has completed the course when the student completes the Final Exam. The prerequisite for being able to take the Final Exam is that a student must have made an 80% or better on the UNIT IV Challenge Exam OR 65% or better on the UNIT IV Exam . The letter grade a student will be assigned will be determined by the weighted average of the grades on the four UNIT Challenge Exams OR UNIT Exams, as the case may be, and the grade on the Final Exam . Each UNIT Challenge Exam OR the associated UNIT Exam will have a weight of 15%, or 150 points. That is UNIT I will have a weight of 15%; UNIT II, 15%; UNIT III, 15%: and UNIT IV will have a weight of 15%; in the point system used this is equivalent to 600 points or 60% of the grade. And the Final Exam will have a weight of 40% or 400 points. 150 + 150 + 150 + 150 + 400 = 1000 points.

Here is a link showing all the prerequisites for all the MyEconLab assignments, regular UNIT Exams, Challenge Unit Exams, the Final Exam, and the Course Challenge Exam:
https://www.austincc.edu/sondg/Prerequisites/PCM/Micro/prereq.htm.

Back to Table of Contents

College and Departmental Goals for Course:

1. Course Rationale- This course is meant to give students insight into the dynamics of a market based economy and how through its mechanism scarce resources are allocated. The theoretical and actual role of the government in this market system will also be addressed. The knowledge gained in the course will make students better informed citizens and allow them to follow the debates over various economic events and policies reported in the news media. This course is also a foundation course that will prepare students to be successful in upper division finance, marketing, business administration, economics, government, and social work courses. 

2. Common Course Objectives/Student Outcomes: Students who complete this course will be able to:

  • apply the basic concepts of scarcity and opportunity cost;
  • manipulate the basic demand and supply model to determine an equilibrium price and quantity, changes to equilibrium price and quantity, and their impact on resource allocation;
  • critically evaluate the usage of policy in microeconomic markets;
  • explain the theory of consumer behavior;
  • explain the theory of the firm;
  • model and explain the theoretical market structures of perfect competition and imperfect competition.

3. Discipline Program Student Learning Outcomes:

  • PSLO 1: Socially Optimal and Suboptimal Outcomes - Model and explain under what circumstances markets are capable of creating socially optimal and socially suboptimal outcomes.
  • PSLO 2: Economic Policy -Defend and criticize the role of economic policy in a mixed market economy.
  • PSLO 3: Economic Data -Critically evaluate economic data.

4. General Education Competencies:

  • Civic and Cultural Awareness - Analyzing and critiquing competing perspectives in a democratic society; comparing, contrasting, and interpreting differences and commonalities among peoples, ideas, aesthetic traditions, and cultural practices.
  • Critical Thinking - Gathering, analyzing, synthesizing, evaluating and applying information.
  • Quantitative and Empirical Reasoning - Applying mathematical, logical and scientific principles and methods.
  • Written, Oral and Visual Communication - Communicating effectively, adapting to purpose, structure, audience, and medium.
Back to Table of Contents

Learning Objectives for Course as Specified by the Instructor:

The UNIT EXAMS in this course are based on learning objectives composed by the instructor that you can find by clicking HERE. The learning objectives for each chapter assigned and for each UNIT EXAM and for the Final Exam can be found in UNIT and Final Exam folders on the course's ACC Blackboard site. Read these objectives carefully before you read the corresponding chapter in the textbook. The learning objectives are correlated exactly with the questions on the UNIT EXAMS.

In general, after studying each chapter, you should be able to:

  1. Answer questions about the topics from the chapter the learning objectives cover. (See Learning Objectives)
  2. Define all the key terms introduced in the chapter and review the "what you should know" section at the end of the chapter.
  3. Answer questions in the Sample Tests in MyEconLab.
  4. Successfully complete the Homework Assignment over the chapter in MyEconLab.
  5. Take the Chapter Quiz over the chapter assigned in MyEconLab by your instructor.

The answers to the learning objectives can be found by reading each chapter. They are probably not as succinct as you might want them to be. But my learning objectives for each chapter were created from the list of learning objectives at the beginning of each chapter of the textbook. There are 4 or 5 of them listed at the beginning of each chapter. I broke these learning objectives down further so that there would be ten learning objectives for each chapter. As it turned out, each learning objective actually correlated with a section or subsection of those chapters. And the list of ten objectives followed exactly the outline of each chapter from beginning to end. That being the case, I would recommend you take the objectives for each chapter and look through the chapter for the answers to each objective. I believe they will be fairly easy to find.

Here again is the link to all my LEARNING OBJECTIVES for each chapter assigned in the course, for each Unit Exam and Unit Challenge Exam, for the Final Exam and the Course Challenge Exam as well as for the two Extra Credit Exams over the chapters not assigned as a regular part of the course.

The learning objectives are there to help you focus your mind on the important concepts and theories discussed in the unit. The exams will test your knowledge of and ability to apply these learning objectives. Knowing this will help you efficiently allocate your mental energies.

Back to Table of Contents

SECTION 4
Pearson MyEconLab & eText


How to Sign Up for Pearson MyLab & eText:

FIRST DAY ACCESS PROGRAM

REQUIRED TEXT:
Economics Today: The Micro View with MyLab Economics, 20th edition, Miller

A discounted charge of approximately $105 (includes tax) has been added to your tuition and fee bill for the cost of the course materials used in this course. By participating in the First Day program, you will gain access to the eText and MyLab Economics through your instructor's Blackboard site.

How to Sign Up for Pearson's MyEconLab Courseware

  1. Click on "Course Materials - MyEconLab (MEL)" in the left navigation column of the course's ACC Blackboard site.
  2. FirstDay - Digital Bundle will load. It includes access to the VitalSourse eText, click "Read Now" to open it. It also includes a link to the Pearson MyEconLab site. Click "Launch Courseware" to register for the site at the beginning of the semester and then later to access the Pearson MyLab site.
  3. When you click on "Launch Courseware," you will be asked to register for Pearson MyLab.
  4. Registering:
    1. If you have already registered for a Pearson product, MyLab or otherwise, for another course, then just sign in with your username and password.
    2. If you have not previously registered for Pearson MyLab, do so now.

Need help? Here is a video provided by ACC's Barnes & Noble Bookstore--First Day--Blackboard Training Video.

For more help with MyLab & Mastering with Blackboard, go to http://help.pearsoncmg.com/mylabmastering/bbi/student/en/index.html.

For First Day questions, go to https://customercare.bncollege.com/hc/en-us/categories/360000142447-First-Day-Inclusive-Access-FAQs.

If you do not wish to participate in the program you have until JUNE 2 to "Opt Out". If you "Opt Out" of receiving and paying for your materials via this program, you will be responsible for obtaining those on your own. These are the required materials for the course.

Back to Table of Contents

MyEconLab--Student Features:

Students benefit when they start an exam confident and prepared. MyEconLab is the only online assessment system that gives students the tools they need to learn from their mistakes right at the moment they are struggling.

  1. Personalized Study Plan

    A Study Plan is generated from each student's results on answering Study Plan questions, by taking the Sample Tests, and by completing the instructor's assignments. Students can clearly see which topics they have mastered-and, more importantly, which they need to work on. The Study Plan links to additional practice problems and tutorial exercises to help on those topics. (When you click on the "Study Plan" link in the left navigation bar of the Pearson MyLab site, it only opens up to a tutorial on how to use MyEconLab. Look for the link "View all chapters" to find access to all the Study Plan questions.)

  2. Unlimited Practice

    Many Study Plan and instructor-assigned exercises contain algorithmically generated values, ensuring students get as much practice as they need. Every problem links students to learning resources that further reinforce concepts they need to master. The Study Plan questions can be taken over and over again; the instructor assigned Homework Assignment can be retaken as many times as a student wants. The Chapter Quizzes can be taken three times. The highest score is used for grading the Chapter Quizzes.

  3. Learning Resources

    In the lower-left corner of each practice problem is a link to the eText section discussing the very concept being applied. Students also have access to guided solutions ("Help Me Solve This"), animated graphs, audio narratives, and flashcards on many of the problems. MyEconLab has a suite of graphing tools for practice and current news articles that tie chapter topics to everyday issues.

  4. Tests and Other Assignments

    MyEconLab comes with two pre-loaded Sample Tests for each chapter so students can self-assess their understanding of the material..

Back to Table of Contents

MyEconLab Chapter Homework Assignments and Chapter Quizzes:

MyEconLab is the online study guide which accompanies our Miller text. MyEconLab is required, not optional at least if you take the normal path through the course like 99.9% of students have in the past. However, if you pass the Course Challenge Exam with an 80% or better, you do not need to complete any of the MyEconLab assignments, since by doing so you have demonstrated that you have a very good grasp of the material covered in this course. You can also skip over the MyEconLab assignments in particular UNITS if you pass the Challenge Exam for that Unit with an 80% grade or better.

While the grades made on MyEconLab assignments are not part of the course grade, students cannot move on to the UNIT EXAMS without making at least and 65% on the assigned Chapter Homework Assignments and Chapter Quizzes that are part of the assignments for each chapter. More details about how this works will be found in the Instructional Methodology II--Competency Based section. A link to a list of all prerequisites for MyEconLab assignments and UNIT EXAMS can be found HERE.

MyEconLab has three types of assignments:

  1. Study Plan: These are ungraded practice questions. You will be given 3 tries, then the system will tell you the correct answer. When you finish, the system will tell you which sections of the chapter you need to focus your study time on.

    Each question will have links to Learning Aids at the lower left of the question or problem. These Learning Aids include

    1. Help Me Solve This - Guided Solutions take you step by step to the correct answer
    2. eText takes you to the page of the text where the information covered by the question is presented even if you did not purchase access to the eBook.
    3. Graphing - allows you to draw a graph of the question to help find an answer
    4. Ask My Instructor - emails the question to me, so I can help you with it

  2. Chapter Homework Assignments: These are graded question sets, set up like the Study Plan sets. Each chapter will have 20 homework questions that are worth 1 point each for a total of 20 points.
    Students must get at least 13 of these questions correct before they can move on to the associated Chapter Quiz.
    Learning Aids are available on Homework assignments, and students will be able to take these assignments over and over again until they get them right.
  3. There is no limit on how many times a student may take a homework assignment. The questions do not vary much from one attempt to the next.

  4. Chapter Quizzes: These are graded assignment sets worth about twice as much as the Homework sets. Each chapter will have 20 quiz questions that are worth 40 points.
    Students must get at least 13 of these questions correct before they can move on to the next Chapter Homework Assignment or to the UNIT EXAM.
    Learning Aids are also available on quizzes while you are working on them, and you will be able to review the graded questions after submitting the quiz with the help of the Learning Aids.
    Like the on-line, mid-term exams, the highest of the three attempts will be used, not the grade on the last attempt. Since you will need at least a 65% on these MyEconLab Chapter Quizzes to move on to the next MyEconLab Chapter Homework Assignment (or, when it is the last chapter in a UNIT, to the UNIT EXAM), these quizzes must be passed to move forward in the course.
    You will have 60 minutes to complete a Chapter Quiz.

The Results link, in the left navigation bar of the Pearson MyLab site, will take you to a page that will give you your scores on each assignment, as well as your overall average, and it will allow you to review the quizzes and homework assignments you have already completed.
Chapter Quizzes and Chapter Homework Assignments will have suggested due dates, but they will be available until the end of the semester. It is in your self interest to complete them on or before the suggested deadlines. The reason for this is because you will not be able to take the UNIT EXAMS on or before their extra credit deadlines if you have not taken and passed the Chapter Homework Assignments and Chapter Quizzes in a UNIT. Passing them on or before the suggested deadline will allow you to take the UNIT EXAMS before their extra credit deadlines. The exta crdit fo taking a UNIT EXAM on time is 20 extra crdit points or 13.3% of the weight of the exam. (The extra crdit for taking the FINAL EXAM on or before its extra crdit deadline is 5% of the weight of the final.)
You will be able to work on the assignments after their suggested deadlines have passed but that means you would have forfeited the extra credit you might have earned by taking the associated UNIT EXAM on time.

Deadlines for Homework Assignments and Quizzes on MyEconLab can be found here: http://www.austincc.edu/sondg/homework/Micro/2022-2023/1st5wSummerMEL.htm

Back to Table of Contents

How to Use Pearson's MyEconLab Courseware and eText

  1. Now that you are registered, you can click on the "Course Materials - MyEconLab (MEL)" in the left navigation bar of Blackboard to access the course material.
  2. After the FirstDay - Digital Bundle loads, click on "Launch Courseware" in the bottom right of the digital bundle pane.
  3. On the next page, click on the "Open MyLab & Mastering" button at the top of the page. It is just to the left of the thumbnail image of the textbook cover.
  4. This will finally take you to the course's actual Pearson MyEconLab site.
  5. There are a number of important links on the left navigation bar of this page that you may find very helpful to your success in this course: <
    1. Assignments: Access to the MyEconLab assignments. There are two other access points to these assignments on the course's Blackboard site, i)"MyLab & Mastering Assignments" in the left navigation bar of Blackboard, and ii) in the chapter folders of the "Course Content" link on the left navigation bar of Blackboard (e.g., Course Content/Unit I/Chapter 1), but this is a nice alternate access point.
    2. Pearson eText: This is a more user-friendly version of the eText than the VitalSource eText available when you click on "Read Now" at the bottom left of Digital Bundle referred to in Step #2 above.
    3. Results: Here you can review your grades on the Chapter Homework Assignments and Chapter Quizzes. If you answered a question incorrectly, the correct answer will be given. If the question is a Problem rather than a Multiple-Choice question, then often times the solution will be explained by clicking "Question Help" in the lower left of the panel or on "Help Me Solve This."
    4. Study Plan: If you navigate to the Study Plan questions for a chapter and click on the Text Problems and then on Question Help/Help Me Solve This, then not only will explanations of the solution be given but also mathematical formulas, which are only given in a verbal format in the textbook, will be provided. Many of my students in the past have told me that this was a lifesaver for them.
    5. Past students have also found the Multimedia Library and Chapter Resources very helpful.
Back to Table of Contents

SECTION 5
Assignments and Deadlines


CHAPTER ASSIGNMENTS/EXAM DEADLINES

UNIT I

Economics Today: The Micro View

Chapter 1: The Nature of Economics and Appendix 1

Chapter 2: Scarcity and the World of Trade-Offs

Chapter 3: Demand and Supply

Chapter 4: Extensions of Demand and Supply Analysis

Test over UNIT I due by June 7 for extra credit points. 
Learning Objectives for Exam 1

UNIT II

Economics Today: The Micro View

Chapter 5: Public Spending and Public Choice
(skip Chapter 6; chapters 7 through 18 are not included in this micro text as they pertain to macro.)

Chapter 19: Demand and Supply Elasticity

Chapter 20: Consumer Choice

Chapter 21: Rents, Profits, and the Financial Environment of Business

Test over UNIT II due by June 14 for extra credit points.
Learning Objectives for Exam 2

UNIT III

Economics Today: The Micro View

Chapter 22: The Firm: Cost and Output Determination

Chapter 23: Perfect Competition

Chapter 24: Monopoly

Chapter 25: Monopolistic Competition

Test over UNIT III due by June 21 for extra credit points.
Learning Objectives for Exam 3

UNIT IV

Economics Today: The Micro View

Chapter 26: Oligopoly and Strategic Behavior
(Skip Chapter 27)

Chapter 28: The Labor Market: Demand, Supply, and Outsourcing
(Skip Chapters 29 and 30)

Chapter 31: Comparative Advantage and the Open Economy

Chapter 32: Exchange Rates and the Balance of Payments

Test over UNIT IV due by June 28 for extra credit points.

Learning Objectives for Exam 4

 FINAL EXAM due by June 30 for extra credit points.

ACC Testing Centers no longer offer face-to-face, in person, proctored testing. This course will use a remote proctoring software for the Final Exam and all other exams in the course. Students who have a Chromebook and cannot download the proctoring software can arrange alternate distance proctoring through ACC (see ACC On-Line Testing), or, more conveniently, they can borrow any other computer from friends or family members that can download the software.
Students will be allowed to take the FINAL EXAM at home along with all other exams in this course using the free proctoring software provided by the college entitled Respondus LockDown Browser and Respondus Monitor.

•All exams will be available on Blackboard for re-testing purposes through Junr 30.
•Beware though! Since Exam 4 is a prerequisite for taking the Final Exam, a student couldn't take the initial attempt on Exam 4 at any time after 9 p.m. on Friday, June 30, and have any hope of taking the Final Exam the same day.
•One re-test is allowed on the final exam, so taking the initial attempt before or early on June 30 is the safe choice.

 

Important Note: If you take these tests on time you will receive extra credit points that will improve your grade. See "Extra Credit Points" under "Grading" for details. The total value of these extra credit points is equal to 2% of the course grade per exam--10% in total. You can earn additional extra credit points by doing the four Extra Credit Assignment Chapter Tests. Details about all the extra credit points available can be found under "Extra Credit Points" below.

Back to Table of Contents

Deadlines for all MyEconlab Assignments and all Exams:

I have created a separtae web page for all the deadlines for the MyEconLab assignments, all the Unit Exams, and the Final Exam. I did this so you could more easily print it and keep it in a handy place.

You will find the website HERE.

In case the link above does not work and you need the specific URL, here it is: http://www.austincc.edu/sondg/homework/micro/2022-2023/1st5wSummerMEL.htm

Back to Table of Contents

Deadline for Extra Credit MyEconLab Assignments and their Exams:

These deadlines are on the same web page as for the Deadlines for all MyEconLab Assignments and all Exams above.

You can directly access them by clicking on the following link: https://www.austincc.edu/sondg/homework/micro/2022-2023/1st5wSummerMEL.htm#MELECT3.
Back to Table of Contents

Prerequisites for All MyEconLab Assignments and Unit Exams:

As noted in several places throughout this syllabus, this is a competency based course. What this means in general is that in order to move on to the next assignment or exam, you must have shown "competence" on the previous assignment of exam by passing it with a minimum grade. That minimum is 65% if you take the regular path through the course and 80% if you take the Challenge Exam path.

As with the Deadlines for all MyEconlab Assignments and all Exams subsection above, I have created a separate web page listing all the prerequisites for the MyEconLab assignments, Unit Exams, the Final Exam, and all the Challenge Exams. I did this so that it would be easy for you to print it out and have it handy as you work your way through the course.

You will find the link to this page by clicking here: https://www.austincc.edu/sondg/Prerequisites/PCM/Micro/prereq.htm.
Back to Table of Contents

SECTION 6
Grading

There are two basic ways to move through this course in order to complete it with a grade of A, B, C, D, or F.

The first is the way 99% of students will choose to proceed. It is the traditional method that all students are accustomed to. It is explained in the first section below.

The second is to show competency (demonstrating knowledge of the material covered) on each unit of the course or on the course as a whole by taking the appropriate challenge exams. It is explained in the second section below.


Grading Traditional Route

The course consists of four units. Each unit contains four chapters of material. Each chapter requires that students pass a homework assignment and a quiz over the material in it on Pearson’s MyEconLab. Students cannot go on to the next chapter until they pass these assignments and quizzes with a grade of at least 65%. Once they pass all of the assignments and quizzes in a unit, the unit exam will become available to them to take. Students must pass the unit exams with a grade of 65% or better to be able to take the next unit exam after they also successfully complete the homework assignments and quizzes of the chapters in the next unit. Three attempts will be available to students on each unit exam with only the highest grade counting. If students cannot make a 65% or better on an exam after three attempts, they must contact the instructor for advice on how to proceed.

Once the fourth unit exam has been successfully completed with a grade of 65% or better, the final exam will become available. Two attempts are allowed on the final exam; only the highest will be used.

A student has completed the course when the student completes the Final Exam. The letter grade a student will be assigned will be determined by the weighted average of the grades on the four UNIT Exams and the grade on the Final Exam . Each UNIT Exam will have a weight of 15%, or 150 points out of 1000 in the course. That is UNIT I will have a weight of 15%; UNIT II, 15%; UNIT III, 15%, and UNIT IV will have a weight of 15%; in the point system used this is equivalent to 600 points or 60% of the grade. And the Final Exam will have a weight of 40% or 400 points. 150 + 150 + 150 + 150 + 400 = 1000 points.

Letter Grade
Weighted Average
Points
A
90 to 100%
900 to 1000+
B
80 to 89.9%
800 to 899
C
65 to 79.9%
650 to 799
D
55 to 64.9%
550 to 649
F
0 to 54.9%
0 to 549

NOTE #1: Because of the Letter grades are exclusively determined by the grades earned on the UNIT Exams. The grades earned on the Pearson MyEconLab homework assignments and quizzes are not used directly in determining letter grades. These assignments and quizzes do matter though, since students cannot take the UNIT Exams without passing them with a grade of 65% or better.

NOTE #2: Because of the Extra Credit Points already mentioned and more thoroughly discussed later in this syllabus, the total points shown in the Blackboard gradebook might be greater than 1000. However, the letter grades will be based on points accumulated as shown in the above table. It is certainly possible that some students might accumulate more than 1000 points.

NOTE #3: The FINAL EXAM grade will be curved. Last summer, the curve for the four sections the instructor offered averaged 25 points. This is important because the exceptions to the above grading table listed in NOTE #4 use the grade you made on the FINAL EXAM plus the curve to determine if you made above or below 55% (F), 65% (D), and 90% (A) respectively. Once the first 18 students have taken the FINAL EXAM, I will add an item to Blackboard's gradebook estimating the curve for your section of the class. This average will change as more students take the exam, but not by much. This does put some uncertainty into figuring out what your FINAL EXAM grade is, but, remember, you do have one retest available on the FINAL EXAM.

NOTE #4: Finally, there are several important pieces of information that students need to keep in mind when preparing for the final exam.
1) If a student makes an F on the final, (that is, makes less than 55% or 220 points out of 400 on the final exam), then the student can make no higher than a C in the course.
In other words, a student cannot make an A or a B in the course if he makes an F on the final.
2) If a student makes a D on the final, (that is, makes at least 55%, 220 points, but less than 65%, 260 points, on the final exam), then the student can make no higher than a B in the course.
In other words, a student cannot make an A in the course if he makes a D on the final.
3) If a student makes a 90% ( 360 points--not counting extra credit points) or above on the final exam, the student will earn an A in the course regardless of his total points.

The first two items are why students are allowed one retest opportunity on the Final Exam and why a Practice Final is being provided to students in this course. It is hoped that this Practice Final will help students better prepare for the final and take away some of the anxiety that students normally feel when approaching a final exam. And the retest opportunity gives students a second chance if they do poorly on the Final. The highest grade of the two attempts on the Final Exam will be used to calculate grades.

Back to Table of Contents

Grading Competency Route:

The traditional route explained in SECTION 1 contains competency components in that students must make minimum grades on the chapter homework assignments and quizzes to proceed to the next chapter and to the UNIT Exam. And students must also make minimum grades on the UNIT Exams to proceed to the next Unit Exam or to the Final Exam.

To make this course a thorough going competency based course, students may skip over the chapter homework assignments and quizzes in a Unit if they can make at least an 80%on the UNIT CHALLENGE EXAM. If students make less than 80% on the UNIT CHALLENGE EXAM, then they must work through all the chapter homework assignments and quizzes in a Unit and take the regular Unit Exam. If students make an 80% or better on the UNIT CHALLENGE EXAM, then they can go on to take the next UNIT CHALLENGE EXAM or start working on the Pearson MyEconLab assignments for the next Unit.

After successfully completing the UNIT IV CHALLENGE EXAM, a student may take the regular Final Exam.
Students’ letter grades in the course will be determined by their grades on the UNIT CHALLENGE EXAMS (or mixture of UNIT CHALLENGE EXAMS and the regular UNIT EXAMS) and the FINAL EXAM.

Like the regular Unit Exams discussed in the Grading Traditional Route section above, UNIT CHALLENGE EXAMS must be taken using the Respondus LockDown Browser and Respondus Monitor.

Unlike the regular UNIT Exams, students will be allowed only one attempt on the UNIT Challenge Exams.

To complete the logic of a Competency Based Education course, a Course Challenge Exam will be available throughout the whole semester. This Course Challenge Exam will be just like the comprehensive Final Exam, AND, like the Final Exam, it must be taken using the Respondus LockDown Browser and Respondus Monitor. It will consist of 100 questions. The questions will all be correlated with specific learning objectives which will be listed on Blackboard. If a student makes an 80% or better on this Course Challenge Exam, then the student will have demonstrated mastery of the material in this Principles of Microeconomics survey course and the grade the student will be assigned will be determined as follows:
Letter Grade
(Grade on Course Challenge Exam not including extra credit points)
A
90 to 100%
B
80 to 89.9%
If a student scores less than a 80% on the Course Competency Exam, then the student will need to show mastery in the four UNITS mentioned above. If a student makes a B on the Course Challenge Exam and wants to raise his grade to an A, then the student will need to proceed through the four UNITS as outlined above.

Back to Table of Contents

Extra Credit Points

There are three ways for students to improve their grades by earning extra credit. The total amount of extra credit available is equal to 27.1% of the course grade.


Extra Credit Type 1: Take the exams on time

You can earn extra credit by taking your exams on or before the initial testing deadlines.

You will earn extra credit equal to 20 points on each UNIT EXAM taken on or before its extra credit deadline. You will not lose this extra credit if you take the re-test for that UNIT after the deadline for regular UNIT EXAMS.

This means there are a total of 80 points, or 8% of the course grade, available as extra credit just by taking the UNIT EXAMS on or before their deadlines.

If you take the Final on or before its deadline, you will earn another 20 points extra credit.

This extra credit is available to those who take the UNIT CHALLENCE EXAMS and the COURSE CHALLENGE EXAM with these caveats: i) the extra credit is only available to those who make an 80% or better on them BEFORE the extra credit is awarded; ii) students CANNOT earn extra credit on BOTH the regular exams and the chanllenge exams.

So the total extra credit avialable by taking all exams by their due date is 10% of the total number of points available in the course.


Extra Credit Type 2: Viewing Short Videos from the Textbook:

Each chapter assigned in each unit of the course contains several videos explaning some of the content contained in the chapter. You can earn extra credit by viewing these videos. These video assignments can be found by clicking the MyLab & Mastering Assignments link in the left navigation bar of the course's Blackboard site. You can also find them on the Pearosn MyLab Home page under Assignments.

These grades will upload automatically to the course's Blackbaord site just like the regular MyEconLab assignments, but they will not be automatically added to your total points. The instructor will have to verify that you have actually watched watched the video for more than 70% of the total time that the video runs before extra credit points will be added to your total points for watching them. The time students spend watching the videos is reported in the insturctor's gradebook on Pearson MyLab under Item Analysis. The time students spend watching the videos is not reported on students' gradebook site on Pearson. One point will be reported on the Pearson site if students watch a video for even 1 second. It is this that the instructor is checking on when recording these extra credit grades.

Here is a spreadsheet listing the lengths of every eText video that I will use to check whether or not to give students credit for watching the videos: Micro eText Video Times.

There will be four gradebook items where the extra credit for watching the videos will be recorded on the course's Blackboard gradebook. The four gradebook items for these videos will correspond to the four UNITs in the course.

There are deadlines for watching the videos for extra credit. The deadlines will be the same as the extra credit deadlines for the UNIT Exams.

All eText videos will remain available after the extra credit deadlines for watching them have passed, but no extra credit would be earned for watching them if they were watched after the deadlines. After the extra credit deadline passes for watching them, the videos will NOT be able to be watched by clicking on any links to them on Blackboard or through the Pearson MyLab Home Page under Assignments. However, they will be available in the eText available thruogh the Pearson MyLab site or by clicking on the Multimedia link in the left navigation site on the Pearson MyLab home page.

There are 65 of these short video spread over the 16 assigned chapters. This extra credit type is worth up to 6.5% of the course grade.


Extra Credit Type 3: Taking MyEconLab Tests on the unassigned chapters of the textbook:

Chapters 6, 27, 29, and 30 are not assigned and will not be covered on any mid-term exam on Blackboard or on the Final Exam.
However small tests over these chapters will be made available on MyEconLab. Each of these tests will be worth 25 points.
If students are looking for another way to improve their grade, then they are encouraged to read these chapters and take these tests.
Students must make 65% or better to earn any points on these tests. This policy is meant to discourage students from taking these tests without reading the chapters.
For example, if a student makes an 80% on one of these extra credit chapter tests on MEL, then he will receive 16 extra credit points: 80%*25=20. If a student makes a 64% on one, then he will earn no extra credit points.
There will be a total of 100 extra credit points available from these tests. 100 points is 10% of 1000 points.
The deadline for completing these extra credit tests is June 30 .
Back to Table of Contents

Withdrawals:

Students are responsible for withdrawing themselves from this course if that is what their personal situation requires. This means that if you have taken only two of the tests and the semester ends without your having withdrawn yourself, then you will receive an F in the course. The instructor makes no promise either implicit or explicit to withdraw students from the course. The instructor does reserve the right to withdraw students who have fallen behind on taking the exams and completing the MyEconLab assignments.

In addition, students should be aware of a change in the law regarding Withdrawals passed by the Texas Legislature in the spring of 2007. Starting in the Fall of 2007, entering freshman will be restricted to six non-punitive withdrawals for the whole of their undergraduate careers while attending state colleges.

Important information about the consequences of withdrawing from a course are discussed at this ACC site: http://www.austincc.edu/apply-and-register/registration-steps/drop-or-withdraw-from-a-class.

Instructions on how to withdraw yourself online can be found here: https://www.austincc.edu/help/myacc-and-online-services-instructions/course-withdrawal-drop-instructions.

The last day to withdraw from this course without penalty is
Friday, June 23.

Back to Table of Contents

Incompletes:

Incompletes are discouraged. They will be given only when extraordinary events intervene so as to make completion of the course impossible. If you want an incomplete, these events must be documented. To receive an incomplete the student must have completed two exams with a grade of C or better. The student must also come by my office to fill out an incomplete grade form. If the form is not filled out, an incomplete grade will not be given.

Click on this link to read the ACC's Policy on Incomplete Grades.

If you do fall behind schedule but still expect to complete the course, please contact me at jason@austincc.edu as soon as possible so I know you are still interested in completing the course.

If you find yourself way behind or many points short toward the end of the semester and do not think you can catch up, you may withdraw from the course without a grade penalty up to three weeks before the end of the semester on or before Friday, June 23. Please read the section on Withdrawals for more information.

Back to Table of Contents

Attendance:

Since this is a Distance Learning course, we do not meet regularly--in a synchronous manner-- as we would do if this was a lecture course that met MWF at 10 am for example. For that reason, attendance will not be taken. However that does not mean that I will not be very closely watching your progress through the course

One of the reasons that I set up a schedule for completing the MyEconLab assignments and UNIT Exams is to monitor how well you are progressing through the course. There are MyEconLab assignments due every week, and I download those grades to a spreadsheet to see who is up-to-date on the assignments and who has fallen behind. I will be communicating with you abut your progress or lack thereof.

I have no set rule for withdrawing students if they do fall behind. However, if by June 19 you still have not started doing any of the assignments or exams, then I will start emailing about withdrawing from the course.

I do expect that you will keep up with the schedule I have set out for completing the assignments and exams. And I give a generous amount of extra credit points to you if you do keep up. By the way, since this is an asynchronous course, you may work ahead of the schedule and finish to course early if you want to.

If you find yourself way behind or many points short toward the end of the semester, you may withdraw without a grade penalty up to 7 days before the end of this short summer session semester. Please read the section on Withdrawals for more information.

Back to Table of Contents


SECTION 7
Testing


All tests in this course will be administered on-line using Blackboard. This means that all tests can be taken at home. All tests require proctoring. Students can take proctored exams at home using free software available from the college.

Since Covid, Testing Centers at ACC no longer offer face-to-face, in-person proctoring of course exams to ACC students or instructors. Apparently, this service will never be reinstated.

For more information about online testing at ACC, visit the Online Testing resource page: https://www.austincc.edu/academic-and-career-programs/acconline/testing. This site is especially important to students who cannot use the free proctoring software offered by ACC because they have Chromebook computers.

Regular/Traditional Unit Exams & Competency Based Unit Challenge Exams

All UNIT Challenge Exams, the Course Challenge Exam, regular UNIT EXAMS, and the Final Exam are objective, multiple-choice question exams.

All UNIT Challenge Exams, the Course Challenge Exam, UNIT EXAMS, and the Final Exam are based on the learning objectives students are expected to master. For more information on learning objectives, please see the section on "Learning Objectives"  in this syllabus above or in Blackboard. Furthermore all exam questions will be drawn exclusively from the textbook, Economics Today: The Micro View. The exams over each UNIT will include ten questions over each chapter assigned for each UNIT, so each UNIT Challenge Exam and the corresponding UNIT EXAM will cover four chapters and consist of 40 questions. The questions will appear on the EXAMS in the order in which the chapters were assigned for the UNIT. For example, on the UNIT I EXAM the first ten questions will cover Chapter 1, next ten will cover Chapter 2, questions 21-30 will cover Chapter 3, and questions 31-40 will cover Chapter 4.. Indeed the questions will be numbered in exactly the same way as the learning objectives  the questions are associated with are numbered. 

The regular EXAMS for each of the four UNITS will be administered over the Internet through the course's ACC Blackboard site. Each regular UNIT EXAM over a UNIT will be found in the corresponding UNIT Module folder which itself will be located in the Course Content folder a link to which is in the left navigation bar of Blackboard. Regular UNIT Exams will be proctored. They do require the use of Respoindus LockDown Browser and Respondus Monitor software.

Each UNIT CHALLENGE EXAM will be found in the Challenge Exam folder which is also in the Course Content folder. These CHALLENGE EXAMS are not required; they are available to students who think they grasp the material in a UNIT well enough to pass a test over it with an 80% or better grade and thereby skip the MyEconLab assignments associated with the UNIT. All UNIT CHALLENGE EXAMS are also proctored. Students can not use books or any other aid in taking the exam. They will be allowed one sheet of handwritten notes with notes written on both sides of the sheet. The CHALLENGE EXAMS require the use of the Respondus LockDown Browser and Monitor.

There will be ten learning objectives listed for each chapter. Each learning objective will have 10 or more questions connected to it by the testing program used in this course. That program will randomly choose one question from each group of ten for the exam. For example, if a UNIT EXAM is 40 questions long, then there will be 10 ways to select the first question, ten ways to select the second question, and so on to the fortieth question. The number of different exams this program can generate for one UNIT Exam is 1040. One billion is 1 followed by 9 zeros. 1040 is 1 followed by 40 zeros, or 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 different exams will be possible for each UNIT EXAM.

These EXAMS will also be timed. You will have 60 minutes to answer 40 questions on the regular UNIT Exams and on the UNIT Challenge Exams.

Once again, the UNIT EXAMS, both Regular and Challenge, will be given on the Blackboard Internet course platform used by ACC, so students will need to sign on to Blackboard through the Respondus browser in order to take these exams.

If students make an 80% or better on the UNIT Challenge Exams, they may move on to the next UNIT Challenge Exam without working through all the EconLab assignments. If a student makes an 80% or better on the UNIT IV Challenge Exam, he may move on directly to take the Final Exam without working through the MyEconLab assignments in UNIT IV.

Students will have the opportunity to re-take each RegularUNIT EXAM twice (there are no re-tests on Challenge Exams). The highest grade will be used in determining grades. Students do not have to re-take these exams if they make over 65% on them, though they can if they want to try to improve their grade on them.. A 65% grade on a UNIT EXAM will allow the student to move on to the next UNIT or the Final Exam if it is the UNIT IV EXAM. If a student does not make an 65% or better on a UNIT EXAM after three attempts, then the student will need to communicate with the Professor of the course before he can re-test it again.

NOTE: All UNIT Challenge Exams, UNIT EXAMS, and the FINAL Exam have prerequisites that have to be met before they can be taken.

UNIT I Challenge Exam: to take this exam you must have taken and passed the Mandatory Orientation Quiz with an 80% grade or better grade.
UNIT I EXAM: to take this exam you must have taken and passed the Mandatory Orientation Quiz with an 80% or better grade AND the Chapter 4 MyEconLab Quiz with a 65% or better grade.

UNIT II Challenge Exam: to take this exam you must have taken and passed the UNIT I Challenge EXAM with a grade of 80% or better OR the UNIT I EXAM with a 65% or better grade.
UNIT II EXAM: to take this exam you must have taken and passed the UNIT I EXAM AND the Chapter 8 MyEconLab Quiz with a 65% or better grade.

UNIT III Challenge Exam: to take this exam you must have taken and passed the UNIT II Challenge EXAM with a grade of 80% or better OR the UNIT II EXAM with a 65% or better grade.
UNIT III EXAM: to take this exam you must have taken and passed the UNIT II EXAM AND the Chapter 13 MyEconLab Quiz with a 65% or better grade.

UNIT IV Challenge Exam: to take this exam you must have taken and passed the UNIT III Challenge EXAM with a grade of 80% or better OR the UNIT III EXAM with a 65% or better grade.
UNIT IV EXAM: to take this exam you must have taken and passed the UNIT III EXAM AND the Chapter 17 MyEconLab Quiz with a 65% or better grade.

FINAL EXAM: to take this exam you must have taken and passed the UNIT IV Challenge EXAM with a grade of 80% or better OR the UNIT IV EXAM with a 65% or better grade.

TO SEE ALL PREREQUISITES FOR ALL MYECONLAB ASSIGNMENTS AND ALL BLACKBOARD EXAMS, CLICK HERE.

YOU SHOULD MAKE EVERY EFFORT TO TAKE THE UNIT EXAMS NO LATER THAN THE LISTED EXTRA CREDIT DUE DATES.

For all extra credit deadlines click here.  

However, all UNIT EXAMS will be available through the last day of the semester for re-testing purposes.

Contact the instructor if you are unable to take any of the exams by the listed date.

Contact the instructor if you have fallen behind schedule so that you can work with the instructor to put together a plan to catch up.

Back to Table of Contents

Final Exam:

(Everythinkg in this section also applies to the Course Challenge Exam.)

The Final Exam must be taken using Respondus LockDown Browser and Respondus Monitor. More information about the Respondus software will be given in the section immediately below this section of the syllabus.

The final exam will be comprehensive. There will be 50 questions on it drawn from the 160 Learning Objective pools used in this course. So each question will be drawn form two to four pools. The questions will be arranged in the order the chapters were assigned. Questions over Chapter 1 will be the first ones encountered and questions over Chapter 32 (Chapters 6, 27, 29, and 30 are skipped) will be the last ones encountered.

Students will be allowed to use two 8.5x11 inch pieces of paper with notes written on both sides. These crib sheets must be hand written -- not typed, and it must not be a photocopy. This crib sheet must be shown on the Respondus Monitor camera before the start of the exam.

More information about the Final Exam will be posted on the Announcements page on this course's Blackboard site about three weeks (one week in the summer) before the end of the semester. (If you complete the course early, please email me, and I will supply you with that information.)

The Final Exam may be retaken once, and there is a Practice Final available on Blackboard.

This Practice Final is a copy of the actual Final Exam you will be taking using the Respondus Lock Down Browser, but the Practice Final Exam does not require the Respondus Lock Down Browser. The Practice Final is the "same" as the Final Exam in the sense that it draws examination questions from the same test pools. It is not an exact copy because it will most likely draw a different question from each pool. Nevertheless, it will give you an excellent sense of what the final exam will be like when you take it using the Respondus LockDown Browser. As such, it should help you understand how much you will need to prepare for the actual final exam. Again, Respondus is not needed to take the Practice Final Exam.

Back to Table of Contents

The Course Challenge Exam

A Course Challenge Exam is offered to all students who want to see if they can pass the course without working through all the Pearson MyEconLab assignments and taking all the UNIT Exams. If students make an 80% or better on this Challenge Exam they will have passed the course and need to do nothing more in it. As the professor of the course, I will give a letter grade of A or B to anyone who can do this.

The prerequisite for taking the Course Challenge Exam is to have compeleted the Mandatory Orientation Quiz with a grade of 80% or better.

This Challenge Exam is exactly like the final exam described above. By "exactly like," I mean all its questions will be randomly drawn for 50 pools of questions just like the Final Exam.

To learn more about the nature if this exam, please read the information given above about the final exam.

Like the Final Exam, the Challenge Exam must be taken using Respondus LockDown Browser and Respondus Monitor.

You must show your student ID or some other official ID with your name and photo ID on it when using Respondus.

If you make over an 80%, you are finished with the course. If you make less than 80%, you will need to proceed through the normal assignments and exams required of the course.

Good luck if you want to try taking it. If you don't succeed, it will not damage your grade in the rest of the course in the least.

If you don't want to attempt taking it, you can proceed to the UNIT I Challenge Exam, or you can start working on the UNIT I MyEconLab assignments.

Back to Table of Contents

Respondus LockDown Browser and Monitor

ACC Testing Centers no longer offers proctoring services to Distance Learning instructors or students.

As a result, all exams that students would have had to take in an ACC Testing Center before the pandemic will now be offered at home on Blackboard using a free proctoring software program.

That software is entitled Respondus LockDown Browser and Respondus Monitor. Instructions on how to download this software to your computer and how to use it can be found on this course's ACC Blackboard site. There are two places on Blackboard that you will find the instructions: Follow this path to the instructions:
1) Click on Mandatory Orientation in the left navigation bar of the course's ACC Blackboard site. The first item you will see in this folder is Mandatory Orientation Quiz. Right below it will be a folder entitled "Instructions on how to use Respondus LockDown Browser and Monitor." Read the information on the folder, then click on the title to open it. You will find instructions on how to download the Respondus software and how to use it.
2) Click on Course Content in the left navigation bar of the course's ACC Blackboard site. The first item you will see in this folder is another folder entitled "Instructions on how to use Respondus LockDown Browser and Monitor." Read the information on the folder, then click on the title to open it. You will find links to and instructions on how to download the Respondus software and to use it.

This software can be used at your home or anywhere in the world that has an Internet connection.

All UNIT EXAMS, UNIT Challenge Exams, the FINAL EXAM, and the COURSE Challenge Exam REQUIRE the use the Respondus software. They must be taken with the Respondus browser.

Back to Table of Contents

SECTION 8
Tips on Studying for Course


Recommended Study Method:

As a student you should:

  1. Spend as much time studying for this non-traditional course as you would have spent if you had registered for this course in its traditional lecture format. In a 16 week fall or spring semester this works out to going to lectures for 3 hours per week and studying outside of lecture reading the material and doing homework for 9 hours a week. This translates into about 12 hours a week for a 16 week course. This translates into 38 hours a week in a 5 week summer course which sounds like too much. But I think that at least 20 hours a week needs to be spent on the course during a 5 week summer session.
  2. Not procrastinate, and you should not cram for the UNIT EXAMS. Set up a regular study schedule for this course and stick to it!
  3. Read the learning objectives supplied by the instructor. The detailed learning objectives in each chapter will be correlated directly on a one-to-one basis with the questions on the UNIT EXAMS.
  4. Study the assigned textbook material. This includes the "Issues and Applications" sections found at the end of most chapters.
  5. Complete the Study Plan found on the Pearson MyEconLab site and the relevant Sample Test over the chapter you are studying. Re-study the material you were weak on. The Study Plan points your weak points out to you.
  6. Go to the Study Plan again and take the second Sample Test for the chapter. Once again re-study the material you are still weak on.
  7. Do all of the Homework for the chapter you are studying. This Homework is graded but can be taken over and over again until you get it right.
  8. Take the relevant Chapter Quiz for that chapter after you feel comfortable with the material the chapter covers.
  9. Take the four UNIT EXAMS and the Final Exam by their assigned deadline dates. Each UNIT EXAM covers four chapters.
Back to Table of Contents

Reading

Reading the textbook thoroughly is the key to doing well in this Distance Learning course. Distance Learning courses have no lectures to help you understand the material being covered. You must rely almost completely on the textbook to help you understand the material. This is why reading, and re-reading the text is so essential.

I recommend that you take these steps in reading each chapter.

Step One: Skim the chapter. Spend three to five seconds looking over each page of the chapter.

Step Two: Quickly read over the chapter again reading only the title of the chapter, the learning objectives, all the headings and sub-headings in the chapter, all the words in bold print, and all the words in the left column of each page in the chapter.

Step Three: Read the introduction of the chapter, the first paragraph of each section or subsection in the chapter and the first sentence of all of the other paragraphs in the section or subsection. Finally read the summary of the chapter.

Step Four: Without referring back to the chapter make a list of all the important concepts, terms, ideas, theories, and laws that you can remember.

Step Five:  Read the introduction, the learning objectives, and the summary of the chapter in the "Chapter Summary" section at the end of the chapter.

Step Six: Revise and improve your list and then use it to make the outline/map of the chapter.

Step Seven: Read the chapter in the text completely and thoroughly.

Step Eight: Revise and improve your outline/map once again. This time add the key terms to the appropriate places in your outline/map if they had been included before this time.

Step Nine: Complete a Study Plan for the chapter in MyEconLab.

Step Ten: Revise your outline/map one more time.

Step Eleven: Review your outline/map every four or five days until the exam and then use it to prepare for the exam.

If you read your textbook in this structured and disciplined way, you will learn much more than if you approach your reading task in an unorganized manner, and you will do much better on the exams than you would otherwise do.

Back to Table of Contents

How to Prepare for MyEconLab Chapter Assignments

When students emails me asking for additional attempts on the chapter quizzes, I give them a very structured response specific to the chapter in question and increase the number of attempts from 3 to 5.

What follows generalizes my advice to them which you can also use as an approach to each chapter. You should also read the following section in the syllabus: Recommended Study Method.

As you approach a new chapter:
  1. Scan the chapter quickly and then read it thoroughly;
  2. View the short videos available in Pearson's MyEconLab site by clicking on Multimedia Library in the left navigation column of the Pearson MyEconLab home page by selecting Multimedia Library in the left column. I am using Chapter 5 as an example here. Select Chapter 5/all sections/Video/Find Now. (I created a short video on YouTube showing how to get there--https://youtu.be/up9fKjjEsZQ).
    These videos will also be available as Extra Credit assignments in the Video folder of each chapter.
    On the Pearson Course Home select Watch these videos:

    Video Lesson: Two Examples of Externalities

    Video Lesson: Private vs. Public Goods

    Video Lesson: The Economics of Healthcare Subsidies

    Video Lesson: Collective Decision Making
  3. watch as many of the videos in the Chapter 5/Watching folder as you stand to watch (hopefully more than one per chapter section). The Khan Academy videos are straight forward lectures, but I like Marginal Revolution University videos the best.
  4. now click on the Study Plan on the Pearson MyEconLab site (see the short video referred to above). Now click on the All Chapters tab. Click on the "+" sign by chapter 5 (again used as an example). Start by looking at section 5.1, the Text Problems. Open Text Problem 5.1. Now click on "Help Me Solve This" in the lower left of the problem window (NOTE: not all questions and problems will have this "help"). This will step you through how to solve this problem. (Note that I did not say try to solve the problem first). Do this for all the Text Problems and Concept Questions that have the "Help Me Solve This" element available (not all do) in all the sections of Chapter 5 (again used as an example for all chapters).
  5. now read the chapter quickly but thoroughly again.
  6. finally start your chapter assignments.
Back to Table of Contents

How to Prepare for Unit Exams

I have created a separate web page for my advice on how to do better on the Unit Exams. I did this so you could more easily print it and keep it in a handy place.

You will find the website HERE.

In case the link above does not work and you need the specific URL, here it is: https://www.austincc.edu/sondg/Syllabi/How-to-Prepare-for-Micro-UNIT-Exams.html.

Back to Table of Contents

View Optional YouTube Videos

I spent some time searching for appropriate videos on YouTube that hopefully will help you understand the content of the assigned chapters better. It is true that I could not find as many for the chapters at the end of the course as for the earlier chapters. Using Chapter 1 as an example, here is the way to find them: click on Course Content in the left navigation bar → UNIT I → Chapter 1 → Videos.
The Khan Academy videos are straight forward lectures, but I like Marginal Revolution University videos the best if they are available.

Back to Table of Contents

    COLLEGE POLICIES

    A separate webpage has been created in order to list and explain all the College Policies ACC mandates be distributed with every section syllabus. You can find the webpage here:https://www.austincc.edu/sondg/Syllabi/CollegePolicies.html.

    There are 13 topics and 5 sub-topics covered in this document. Links to these topics and sub-topics can be found below.

  1. Campus Operations: Health & Safety Protocols
  2. Statement on Academic Integrity
  3. Student Rights & Responsibilities
  4. Senate Bill 212 and Title IX Reporting Requirements
  5. Student Complaints
  6. Statement on Privacy
  7. Recording Policy
  8. Safety Statement
  9. Use of ACC email
  10. Campus Carry
  11. Discrimination Prohibited
  12. Use of the Testing Center
  13. Student Support Services
    1. Student Accessibiliity Services
    2. Academic Support
    3. Library Services
    4. Student Organizations
    5. Personal Support
Back to Table of Contents