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Understanding the Tragedy of the Commons part of Teaching Methods:Team-Based Learning:Activities
C. Lucy Malakar, Lorain County Community College
Students will watch a portion of a South Park episode that illustrates the tragedy of the commons and apply the concept to a more serious situation. After viewing the video, will debate and discuss ways to prevent ...

US China Trade War - An Application of the AD/AS Model part of Teaching Methods:Team-Based Learning:Activities
Ann Werboff, Northern Arizona University
In this activity, students will analyze some of the events in the US China Trade War in 2018 using the AD/AS model and discuss the implications of tariffs.

The Tax Game: What are fair and effective tax rates? part of Teaching Methods:Team-Based Learning:Activities
Mark Maier, Glendale Community College
Based on an online simulation teams choose from five tax regimes that each collect the same tax revenue but do so with different tax rates. Teams predict the impact of their tax choices and then, based on the ...

Game Theory Simulation Exercise: Pricing Prisoner's Dilemma part of Teaching Methods:Team-Based Learning:Activities
Alan Green, Stetson University
Student teams act as firms and make strategic pricing decisions. Each firms' profits depend on all of the teams' decisions.

How do imports affect GDP? part of Teaching Methods:Team-Based Learning:Activities
Brandon Sheridan, Elon University
Imports are perhaps the most misunderstood portion of the GDP identity (Y=C+I+G+NX). This exercise uses real data to have students explore this issue and learn the nuance behind the numbers.

Price Elasticity of Demand part of Teaching Methods:Team-Based Learning:Activities
Doug McKee, Cornell University-Endowed Colleges
Teams are given a list of goods and asked to identify what they think are the most elastic and least elastic.

Game theory: externalities, the prisoner's dilemma and Nash equilibrium as seen in South Park part of Teaching Methods:Team-Based Learning:Activities
C. Lucy Malakar, Lorain County Community College
After viewing a brief segment of a South Park episode, students create a game theory matrix and apply the concepts of the Prisoner's Dilemma and Nash Equilibrium.

Comparing Market Structures part of Teaching Methods:Team-Based Learning:Activities
Amber Casolari, Riverside City College
Working in predetermined teams of 4-5 students, teams will examine and identify the market structure for cell phone operating systems. After examining the current market structure, teams will be asked to analyze ...

Identifying Market Structure in the Fast Food Industry part of Teaching Methods:Team-Based Learning:Activities
Ezra Pugh, Glendale Community College
Students use data to determine whether the fast food industry more closely resembles a monopoly, monopolistic competition, or oligopoly, then decide whether regulation is warranted.

The official CPI and bias part of Teaching Methods:Team-Based Learning:Activities
Grace Eau, Georgia State University
This activity aims for students to gain insights about the problems in measuring a price index.