06-19-2017, 01:23 PM
I have been spending a lot of time this month working through the Davar unlimited exam sale, but I have also been taking an online graduate course in economics called Common Sense Economics for Life. This particular session of the class is an accelerated summer session that runs from June 5 through July 16 and it is intended for teachers, but seems open to anyone. Normally, the time period for the course is about double this, but I am now on summer break and the accelerated version fits my schedule. This course appealed to me because it offers the chance to earn 3 graduate credits transcripted with the ECON prefix. This one comes in as ECON 5010-770. The credits themselves are awarded by the University of Colorado Colorado Springs and their extension arm. The course itself is a partnership with a course provider called Certell, which is, apparently, based in Indiana.
This course also has appeal for me because it is one of the two required courses for the University of Colorado graduate certificate in economics education. I will be attending economics summer camp in July at Oberlin College to earn the second required graduate course. Then, I will need to take 6 more online graduate credits to earn the certificate. Following this, I will pick up six more graduate credits to earn the 18 in economics that I would need to teach at the community college level since I already have a master's degree (MAT) in teaching. An economics education graduate certificate will also pair well with the BSBA CIS/Accounting that I am working on through TESU.
The course itself is reasonably enjoyable. Each week, the professor assigns two or three modules from the 15 total modules in the course. There is a reading assignment from a provided text, a pdf slideshow, 2 to 5 video segments, one to 4 audio clips, a five or six question set, a pre- and post-module forum discussion post and a module quiz. Every three to five modules, there is an exam. I am through five modules and my grade is currently a 97.5%. It is very doable, but it does take some careful work to make sure everything is correct. The professor and assistants are very responsive.
Economics is something of a conservative academic discipline and there is a very definite conservative spin to some of the content. I have watched some content from the American Enterprise Institute and John Stossel is widely used in the video section. This might annoy me, but most of the course is pretty standard economics content and the course costs only about $375 for three in-discipline graduate economics credits. Very good deal in my mind.
Links:
CSE1000ED: Common Sense Economics for Life | certell.org
http://www.uccs.edu/Documents/lases/Cert...mmer17.pdf
Earn a Certificate in Econ/PFL
This course also has appeal for me because it is one of the two required courses for the University of Colorado graduate certificate in economics education. I will be attending economics summer camp in July at Oberlin College to earn the second required graduate course. Then, I will need to take 6 more online graduate credits to earn the certificate. Following this, I will pick up six more graduate credits to earn the 18 in economics that I would need to teach at the community college level since I already have a master's degree (MAT) in teaching. An economics education graduate certificate will also pair well with the BSBA CIS/Accounting that I am working on through TESU.
The course itself is reasonably enjoyable. Each week, the professor assigns two or three modules from the 15 total modules in the course. There is a reading assignment from a provided text, a pdf slideshow, 2 to 5 video segments, one to 4 audio clips, a five or six question set, a pre- and post-module forum discussion post and a module quiz. Every three to five modules, there is an exam. I am through five modules and my grade is currently a 97.5%. It is very doable, but it does take some careful work to make sure everything is correct. The professor and assistants are very responsive.
Economics is something of a conservative academic discipline and there is a very definite conservative spin to some of the content. I have watched some content from the American Enterprise Institute and John Stossel is widely used in the video section. This might annoy me, but most of the course is pretty standard economics content and the course costs only about $375 for three in-discipline graduate economics credits. Very good deal in my mind.
Links:
CSE1000ED: Common Sense Economics for Life | certell.org
http://www.uccs.edu/Documents/lases/Cert...mmer17.pdf
Earn a Certificate in Econ/PFL