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Course Information: Advanced Topics in Economics:
Sports Economics (EC 390) - Colorado College
Professor Aju Fenn
Students apply theory to various aspects of professional
and collegiate sports, considering topics such as wage discrimination,
economics of stadiums, alumni giving, academics, broadcasting,
and gambling.
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Type: Group project
Oral presentation
Web site
Level: 300
Block Plan Context:
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Important Features of the Assignment:
- This assignment asks students to utilize a variety of
information sources, including popular news, statistics,
and scholarly articles.
- The ultimate product is a website, which allows for artistic
creativity as well as technological abilities.
- The websites presented in class in three stages, allowing
the professor to monitor progress throughout the block.
- This assignment utilizes both writing and quantitative
skills.
- Because this is a group assignment, students are forced
to work together, pooling their skills in an effort to create
a website that is better than anything any one of them could
have done alone.
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Description of Assignment:
Students create a website on one of the following topics:
- The economic impact of a sports team on the local economy.
This topic includes public vs. private financing of sports
stadiums; the direct and indirect benefits of franchises
on economic growth.
- Competitive balance in sports.
This topic includes the impact of competitive balance on
the "financial health" of the sport; factors that
affect competitive balance.
- Discrimination in sports.
This topic includes employer discrimination in hiring and
playing minority athletes; coaches and consumer discrimination
in attendance and in the market for sports memorabilia.
- Collegiate sports.
This topic includes any economic issues pertaining to NCAA
sports. These issues may range from the connection between
winning athletic programs and alumni contributions to the
impact of athletics on academics.
- Attendance in sports.
This topic will focus on the demand analysis of all types
of sports ranging from attendance at sporting events to
the demand for recreational fishing.
The website will contain three sections:
- MOTIVATION: This part of the website will explain why
it is important to study the topic. It will motivate the
need to study the topic by summarizing news items from the
popular press (NY Times, Washington Post, CNN, Sports Illustrated,
etc.). You will also create links to the stories. All sources
must be properly cited.
- DATA & STATS: This section will contain all data that
pertains to the topic that you are studying. You will create
downloadable excel files with descriptions attached to each
file. You may also use this data to display information
graphically and in tabular form on your website. All data
sources must be properly cited.
- JOURNAL ARTICLE ABSTRACTS: This section will contain the
names and sources of journal articles that you find on the
subject. Each article will have a brief summary below it
that contains the findings of the article, the model used
and the sources of data. You will follow the citation style
from the Journal of Sports Economics.
GRADING: The website will be evaluated during three classroom
presentations. The expectation for each presentation are as
follows:
PRESENTATION #1 (10%): Sections one and two should be up and
running with some content (3-4 news stories, 2 or more data
tables). Section three will contain at least two articles
(possibly from on-line sources) with abstracts.
PRESENTATION #2 (10%): Sections one and two should show considerable
development over presentation 1 (6-8 news stories, 5 or more
tables). Section three will contain at least ten new articles
with abstracts.
PRESENTATION #3 (10%): All sections should now be complete,
showing considerable development over presentation 2. If I
am able to do a web search in Google and find data that you
do not have, section two will be considered incomplete. Section
three will include at least ten new articles with abstracts.
If you run out of articles and I am able to find some that
you do not have, section three will be considered incomplete.
The entire website is due on a zip disk at the beginning of
this presentation.
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Timeline:
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Wk
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Monday
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Tuesday
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Wednesday
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Thursday
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Friday
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Weekend
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1
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The ABC's of a scholarly website Marla Gerien.
1p.m. Basic Homepage Construction with Paraprof PALMER 20.
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Session with librarian - how to find scholarly& news articles.
statistics. |
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Website group presentation 1. |
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2
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Free day to update website.
Meet with Paraprof & Ref librarian as needed.
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Website group presentation 2. |
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3
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4
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Website group presentation 3. |
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