Transcript Slide 1

“Involve Me and I Will Understand”
Prepared for presentation at
The 8th Annual Economics Teaching Conference Orlando, FL,
November 9th, 2012.
There is a famous Chinese adage:
Tell me and I will forget, show me and I will remember, involve me
and I will understand.
• As economics instructors, we always strive to perfect the art of
teaching.
• At my school teaching is the number one criteria for evaluation of
faculty performance although recently research is emphasized but
teaching is still the main concern.
• I believe teaching economics is particularly challenging for those
of us who teach economics to non-econ majors.
• A relatively large number of first-time students who come to our
classes with the mindset that economics is a boring, abstract subject,
and who can blame them.
• I understand that passive teaching is perhaps the key reason why
many economics students think economics is conceivably irrelevant to
real-life cases.
• I have come to the realization that the crux of the problem is
teaching solely from textbooks that are rich in terms of
sophisticated theories but have poor when it comes to practical
applications.
• There are success skills that cannot be acquired from lecturing per se,
but must be obtained through practice, trial and error, problem
solving, and analytical exercises.
• In light of this, instructors must provide various opportunities for
students to apply their theoretical knowledge and to learn on their
own by creating a suitable environment.
• A clear manifestation of the changing emphasis and priorities is the
popularity of non-textbook economics books: Freakonomics, Price of
Everything, That Used to Be Us, the Aftershock, and What Money
Can’t Buy to name a few
• In addition, variety of teaching seminars and workshops on
economics education are offered every year symbolize the serious
attempts to mend the unflattering representation of economics as
an abstract subject.
• There are a few pedagogical methods that I believe can make
teaching effective, rewarding, and a more pleasant experience.
• Understandably, there is no universal method that works best,
some methods have worked well for me.
Two essential elements of good teaching:
content and delivery system.
Content:
Strong
Poor
Strong
Excellent
Mediocre
Poor
lackluster
Awful
Delivery:
Involvement as an essential component of effective teaching.
• As such, instructors must provide ample opportunities for
students to get involved using innovative approaches.
• For several years I have encouraged my students to participate in a
series of community based projects to get them involved
• The one I am going to present today is an entrepreneurial project I
call the SMALL BUSINESS PROJECT, SBP.
Importance of Small Businesses
• One of the unintended, but positive, consequences of recent Great
Recession was the realization of the fact that small companies play
a significant role in generating jobs and keeping our economy
buoyant.
• Of the 29 million U.S. business establishments, 96% have fewer than
500 employees; 4% have 500 or more.
• The large businesses employ 50.6% of the workers; the small
businesses employ 49.4%.
• When it come to job growth, the situation is different, the Kansas
City Fed says that small businesses accounted for 79.5 percent of
new job creation from 1990 to 2003, while large businesses created
only 7.3 percent of jobs, and mid-sized businesses 13.2 percents in
that same time period.
• Historically, small business’s contribution to GDP has been about
50% even though this share has fallen to below 50 percent for the
first time, 46% in recent years.
Challenges unique to small Businesses:
• Small business owners tend to rely on their personal resources.
They think that they can do everything themselves. The percentage
of small businesses with 10 or fewer employees is about 93%. In
fact, 76.9% have no employees.
• They don’t think that they need professional services, even if they
do, they may not be able to afford them.
• High opportunity costs. Time is very scarce, hence precious for
small business owners. Attending training sessions therefore,
entails a high opportunity costs, as well as monetary costs, for
them.
• In addition, such services may not be available on structured basis
because of lack of supporting network and trained staff especially
in local communities.
• Inadequate schooling makes it difficult for the small business
owners to find professional services that help them to succeed.
Even if the useful information is available to them, they may not be
able to make use of it.
• That is why such services must be provided for them most
effectively via personal contacts by external sources. The question
of delivery mechanism is also another issue that will be addressed
by this proposal.
• Despite their significant contribution to the economy, scant
attention has been paid, by government, to economic needs of
these business institutions at least before the presidential election.
• The business schools can play a pivotal role by developing programs
devoted to building partnership with local businesses and by
requiring students, especially those majoring in economics and
business, to engage actively in business-oriented projects.
• And, the university professors can contribute to these programs
effectively without watering down the academic rigor by
encouraging and rewarding students for their participation in this
programs.
• Training students to become a source of professional advice to
small businesses in the community is the fist step in Small Business
Project discussed by this presentation.
• The primary goal is to prepare a step by step instruction manual for
service-learning method of teaching/learning, engaging students
with experiential projects, and develop schemes to assess the
effectiveness of business-oriented projects referred to earlier as
small business projects, SBP.
• Under the supervision of a faculty advisor, the students will be
trained to teach the necessary analytical skills to the local
entrepreneurs, skills that help them to succeed in today’s
competitive environment or to overcome the problems they are
experiencing.
Benefits to Students:
• student will actively move beyond the abstract world of
classroom teaching and take advantage of the opportunities
that allow them to apply their theoretical knowledge to reallife cases thus enhance their own learning experience,
• Students will help to lift the standard of living in their
community and promote the public awareness of economic
and social issues.
• Elevating the level of welfare for the business people who
may be in dire need of support and professional consultation
• Networking with business firms that helps them to explore
employment opportunities
Role of faculty advisor:
• Mentor, coordinator, and the liaison between various parties
involved with this project.
• He/she solicits the active support of the school’s administrators and
colleagues,
• Makes sure that various phases of the projects are executed on
time,
• Providing feedback and making sure that the benefits of this
project will continue even after it ends.
• Fundraising
Different phases of this project;
1. Recruiting, Preparation, and training,
•The first couple of weeks of project will be
devoted to brainstorming, training, and
reviewing the key economic and business
concepts.
•The college of business with the assistance
of the faculty advisor will offer training to
the participating students.
• The participating students will learn the analytical tools and
concepts such as:
• costs analysis, demand analysis, the characteristic of potential
customers, what factors influence demand for their products,
break-even analysis, basic financial statements, market niches,
pricing strategies, average cost estimation, how the profit
maximization can be achieved, and how investment projects can be
assessed correctly, and the market structure under which they are
operating.
2. Selection of a project/team leader,
• selecting a motivated student with proven leadership ability as the
project leader.
• Functions: Progress reports to the faculty advisor
• Formal contacts the various parties involved,
• Schedules the meetings, and arranges the transportation to and
from the business firm’s location.
• He/she keeps track of those who attend the meetings and the
progress made, documents every visit, and presents a summary of
project after the completion of the project to faculty advisor.
• The designated project leader may also arrange the fund raising
events to generate money for the related expenses or seek
additional funds from school.
• He/she is also responsible for keeping track of the expenses related
to SBP and saving the receipts for reimbursement purposes
3. Selecting a target business firm
• finding a target small business firm in the community with unique
product and/or in need of consultation is the goal of this step.
• The small firms are usually owned by an individual or families, rely
on local market, and are financed by family funds or occasionally by
bank loan.
• Mangers/owners of these businesses believed to lack adequate
education and/or modern business skills.
• Students can find such firms by visiting the neighborhood, talking
to their employer or to other students, inquiring from their parents
and their professors, and etc.
• After selection of the target business form, the team leader will
send a letter to the owner to initiate the initial contact and explain
the project and the process to the owner of the business as well as
his intention to visit the business on site and arrange a brief
interview with the owner/manager.
4. Consultation and advising,
• In this phase of the project, students collect the needed
information about the firm’s operation and start the consultation
process.
• To minimize the cost to entrepreneur, the students visit the
company on site
• At early visits students collect relevant information that help them
to diagnose the existing and potential problems and provide
relevant advice on systematic basis.
• After the initial contact(s), students meet at school to formally
discuss and analyze the information they have obtained. They
usually meet once a week.
• They, then, decide what method will be most helpful to the
particular business they are dealing with and what type of changes
the business needs to make.
• During this phase of SBP student collect data about existing and
potential market for the firm’s product, the socioeconomic traits of
the surrounding community, the characteristics of current and
potential customers, and the laws and regulations that can have an
effect on the business.
• Furthermore, students obtain data on the nature of production
mode and the key inputs, costs structure, workable marketing
strategies, and other information deemed relevant.
• The collected data will be analyzed by the students at the end of
this stage, tallied, and summarized in a report.
• The report provides a through explanation of the status of the
business, detection of any possible problems, and more
importantly, recommendations for improvement.
• During the subsequent visits, students will discuss with the owner
what kind of changes/strategies they think will help his business
and what they plan to do to accomplish that.
• Student may also purchase some of the products produced by the
firm, or ask for donation, to sell in campus for fund raising
purposes.
• The plan of action designed and prepared by the students should be
tailor-made to suite the specific condition of the selected business
firm.
5. Documentation and written report,
• at this stage, a comprehensive written report is provided by the
students and preparations are made for a presentation at the
school or in a class, and/or regional competitions with teams from
other schools in a Regional Competition.
• Such competitions are sponsored by the Students in Free
Enterprise, SIFE, a national organization dedicated to the
promotion of market economy and entrepreneurship.
• The report should include the title of the project, a profile of each
and every student participated in the process, a through
explanation of the firm: strengths, opportunities, weaknesses,
threat, etc.
• Project also included its purpose and its impact, the method of
implementation, the outcome, the sustainability of the project, and,
how was it utilized by the target business firm.
• Everything must be documented using the latest instructional
technology, images, testimonial videos, and other visual aids.
• The report then will be condensed into a number of Power Point
slides for formal presentation at school or at the regional SIFE
competition.
• The report can be supplemented by auxiliary documents such as a
video-taped testimonial statement by the owner of the firm about
the impact of SBP on his/her business.
• Outcome assessment report must also contain a statement about
the sustainability of the project and if it continues the next
semester or next year.
6. Outcome Assessment,
• The purpose of the last phase of SBP is to explore the degree by
which the business firm has been impacted by the students’ efforts.
• The assessment report contains information about the impact of
the SBP program and how it helped the targeted business, the
number of hours spent on each phase of the project, the
quantitative data showing the progress made, etc.
• To formalize the processes, students develop formal contact letters
and survey instruments to facilitate their work at various stages of
this project.
• Such instruments will be used by students to collect data related to
the firm’s operation, collect input from current and potential
consumers, test market the products, collect information about the
surrounding community, etc.