Althouse Hall
717-245-1635
Is author of Electronic String Art: Rhythmic Mathematics, Taylor and Francis, 2024, Intermediate Microeconomics: An Interactive Approach, Textbook Media Press, 2016, and is coauthor of Managerial Economics: Economic Tools for Todays Decision Makers, 7th edition, Pearson, 2013 with Paul Keat and Philip Young. He is interested in interdisciplinary research and teaching pedagogy. He has consulted for Seagram Classics Wine Company, BlueSky Investment Management, Forum on Education Abroad, and the Pennsylvania Department of Health and his published research ranges from economics and economic pedagogy to political geography and communications theory to physical education and public health. The link above takes you to his current project, Playing with Polygons, which formed the basis for the Electronic String Art book.
FYSM 100 First-Year Seminar
The First-Year Seminar (FYS) introduces students to Dickinson as a "community of inquiry" by developing habits of mind essential to liberal learning. Through the study of a compelling issue or broad topic chosen by their faculty member, students will:
- Critically analyze information and ideas
- Examine issues from multiple perspectives
- Discuss, debate and defend ideas, including one's own views, with clarity and reason
- Develop discernment, facility and ethical responsibility in using information, and
- Create clear academic writing
The small group seminar format of this course promotes discussion and interaction among students and their professor. In addition, the professor serves as students' initial academic advisor. This course does not duplicate in content any other course in the curriculum and may not be used to fulfill any other graduation requirement.
INBM 300 Applied Empirical Analysis
Cross-listed with ECON 314-04. This course provides students with the opportunity to undertake their own empirical investigation on topics of their choice. Students are welcome to use the information that I have gathered but they are also encouraged to obtain and analyze data of their choosing, subject to professor approval. Students have access to start of year and end of year physical activity and stature measures for more than 10,000 middle school students, two thirds of whom had daily PE, as well as school district level data for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and APFT data from West Point Cadets. Various statistical software packages are used. The class culminates in presenting your own findings in a poster presentation that is open to the public.
INBM 300 Microeconomic Modeling Excel
Cross-listed with ECON 314-03. The class will initially explore a series of consumer theory, producer theory, and market structure topics in greater depth than was covered in intermediate level microeconomics classes (ECON 278 and INBM 220). These topics will be explored using Excel files that were created to examine the comparative static properties of the various models. Ultimately, each student will work with the instructor to build out the analysis of a specific model with the goal of creating an annotated Excel file, paper, or blended learning video on a topic of their choosing.
ECON 314 Applied Empirical Analysis
Cross-listed with INBM 300-05. This course provides students with the opportunity to undertake their own empirical investigation on topics of their choice. Students are welcome to use the information that I have gathered but they are also encouraged to obtain and analyze data of their choosing, subject to professor approval. Students have access to start of year and end of year physical activity and stature measures for more than 10,000 middle school students, two thirds of whom had daily PE, as well as school district level data for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and APFT data from West Point Cadets. Various statistical software packages are used. The class culminates in presenting your own findings in a poster presentation that is open to the public.
ECON 314 Microeconomic Modeling Excel
Cross-listed with INBM 300-04. The class will initially explore a series of consumer theory, producer theory, and market structure topics in greater depth than was covered in intermediate level microeconomics classes (ECON 278 and INBM 220). These topics will be explored using Excel files that were created to examine the comparative static properties of the various models. Ultimately, each student will work with the instructor to build out the analysis of a specific model with the goal of creating an annotated Excel file, paper, or blended learning video on a topic of their choosing.