Title: (Re)thinking like an economist: pluralism, critical thinking and economic pedagogy

Authors: David Kristjanson-Gural

Addresses: Bucknell University, Lewisburg, PA 17837, USA

Abstract: This paper describes the economic way of thinking and how adherence to the goal of encouraging students to think like an economist arose. The example of the theory of demand in institutional and Marxian economics is used to illustrate how the mainstream economics curriculum, by adhering to a singular way of thinking, deprives students of the opportunity to think critically about their role as producers and consumers in the economy and about how economic theories work. Only by adopting theoretical and pedagogical pluralism can the profession overcome these weaknesses. It concludes by assessing the prospects and strategies for promoting a pluralist approach within the profession and by outlining steps that faculty and students might take to ensure that education in economics is genuinely empowering.

Keywords: economics education; economics pedagogy; pluralism; critical thinking; institutional economics; Marxian economics; contending theories; thinking like an economist; economic way of thinking.

DOI: 10.1504/IJPEE.2017.089314

International Journal of Pluralism and Economics Education, 2017 Vol.8 No.4, pp.341 - 358

Accepted: 15 May 2017
Published online: 17 Jan 2018 *

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