| Course Code: | ECON 202 |
| Title: | Principles of Economics - Macro |
| Semester: | Summer 2010 |
| Class Meetings: | ONLINE - no face-to-face class meetings |
| Instructor: | Jim Luke |
| Office: | LCC Main Campus, A&S Building, Room 361E |
| Phone & Voice Mail: | 313-550-8884 (cell +
text) - preferred 517-483-5384 (office) |
| Email: | lukej@lcc.edu (preferred for all email - If you do use Angel email, please provide a real email address, such as yourtuid@lcc.edu that I can reply to. Replying through Angel is cumbersome and time-consuming). |
| Office Hours: | I do not have
regular office hours during the summer semester, although I am
occassionally on campus. Please make an appointment and check http://jimluke.com/wheres-jim-today/ |
| Credit | Lecture | |
| 4 | 64 |
Taylor, Timothy; Principles of Economics, published by Freeloadpress, 2008, ISBN: 1-930789-05-X
Where to get the textbook: Traditional economics textbooks generally cost $150-$190, which the Econ faculty at LCC considers too much. Instead we use a textbook that is available for $9.95 online or in a bundle of a printed book plus online for only $31.95. The book is available online only at www.textbookmedia.com . You may choose either the online or the print+online bundle versions. They are identical in content. HOWEVER I STRONGLY RECOMMEND GETTING A PRINTED OR PRINTABLE VERSION. Students with printed versions do better in the course and student feedback suggests it is the better option. The $9.95 online version has a full page ad every 5 or 6 pages, but the ads are easy to skip past. You can purchase a paperback copy of the text printed in black and white without ads for $31.95 plus $5.00 shipping through the textbook's website, but that is not required. I have developed a detailed tutorial explaining how to register online and access the textbook which you can view at jimluke.com/taylor/DownloadTaylor.html.
|
Type of Graded
Assignment
|
Points Available | %
of Final Course Grade |
| Quizzes (online) | 130 points | 32.50% |
| Worksheets (online) | 90 points | 22.50% |
| Midterm Tests (online) | 60 points | 15.00% |
| Req'd. Forum Posts (3) | 15 points | 3.75% |
| Review
Exercise |
5 points |
1.25% |
| Final Exam | 100 points | 25.00% |
| Total for Course | 400 points | 100% |
| Course Grade | % of Possible | Minimum Points Earned | |
| 4.0 | Excellent | 91-100% | 364 |
| 3.5 | 86-90% | 344 | |
| 3.0 | Good | 81-85% | 324 |
| 2.5 | 76-80% | 304 | |
| 2.0 | Satisfactory | 71-75% | 284 |
| 1.5 | 66-70% | 264 | |
| 1.0 | Poor | 60-65% | 240 |
| 0.0 | No Credit | 0-59% | 0 |
The very nature of higher education requires that students
adhere to
accepted standards of academic integrity. Therefore, Lansing
Community College has adopted a code of academic conduct and a
statement of student academic integrity. These may be found
in
the Lansing Community College Catalog where violations of adademic
integrity are listed and defined. Such violations include
both
cheating and plagiarism. It is the student's responsibility to be aware
of behaviors that constitute academic dishonesty. Classroom and
online behavior that interferes with the
instructional
and learning processes is not tolerated. the consequences are
addressed in the catalog under Administrative Withdrawal.
Classroom and online behavior that interferes with the
instructional process is not tolerated. The consequences are addressed
under Administrative Withdrawal.
I
encourage discussion between students and the sharing of ideas and
information. One of the best methods for learning and truly
grasping economic concepts is to explain them to others. Students
are welcome to assist each other in learning. However, the direct
exchange of answers to questions without discussion, argument, or
reasoned explanation is viewed as academic dishonesty. I reserve
the right to reject the score of any assessment that I suspect may have
been obtained dishonestly and not through student learning, even
without proof of any dishonest actions by the student.