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Office: Krannert Center, 231
Phone: (765)-494-8543
Email:
mwatts@purdue.edu
Center Web site:
http://www.mgmt.purdue.edu/centers/pcee/
Ph.D., Economics, Louisiana State University, 1978
M.A., Economics, Louisiana State University, 1974
B.A., Economics, Louisiana State University, 1972
Professor
Watts has been with Krannert since 1981. He is the
director of the Purdue Center for Economic Education
chair of the American Economic Association's Committee
on Economic Education. He has served as president
of the National Association of Economic Educators and
the Society of Economics Educators, and as Vice President
of the Midwest Economic Association. He is listed in Who's Who in
Economics, 4th ed., Elgar. He has made more than
40 trips to Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union
since 1992, to help universities in those countries
restructure their economics curriculums, and to train
or retrain university and secondary economics teachers
and teacher trainers. He also has taught in training
programs for economic teachers in Egypt and Mexico. His main teaching interests include
microeconomics, labor economics, managerial economics,
public policy analysis, and the history of economic thought.
His major publications include The Literary Book
of Economics; "Economics Coursework and Long-Term
Behavior and Experience of College Graduates in Labor
Markets and Personal Finance (with S. Allgood, W.
Bosshardt, and W. van der Klaauw); "Time Allocations and
Reward Structures for Academic Economists from 1995 to
2005: Evidence from Three National Surveys" (with C.
Harter and W. Becker; "Not Such Innocents Abroad?" (with
G. Schaur); "Assessment Practices and Trends in
Undergraduate Economics Courses" (with G. Schaur and W.
Becker; "Undergraduate Students and Coursework in
Economics: Results from the Baccalaureate and Beyond
Study" (with W. Bosshardt); "A Little More than Chalk
and Talk: Results from a National Survey" (with W.
Becker); "What Students Remember and Say About College
Economics Years Later" (with S. Allgood, W. Bosshardt,
and W. van der Klaauw); "Is Sexy Economics and Economics
Teaching Necessary or Sufficient?";How Economists
Use Literature and Drama;" "A Statewide Assessment of
Pre-College Economic Understanding and DEEP;"
Teaching Economics: More Alternatives to Chalk and Talk
(with W. Becker); "Faculty
Incentives and Time Allocations in U.S. Departments
of Economics" (with C. Harter and W. Becker); Reforming
Economics and Economics Teaching in the Transition Economies
(co-editor, with W. Walstad); "Reforming Undergraduate
Economics Instruction in Russia, Belarus, and Ukraine"
(with A. Kovzik); "Comparing Student and Instructor
Evaluations of Teaching" (with W. Bosshardt);
"How Departments of Economics Evaluate Teaching" (with
W. Becker); National Standards in Economics,
History, Social Studies, Civics, and Geography:
Complementarities, Competition, or Peaceful
Coexistence?" (with S. Buckles)"Teaching
Economics to Undergraduates: Alternatives to Chalk and
Talk (co-editor, with W. Becker); ;
"Who Values Economic Literacy?"; "Chalk
and Talk: A National Survey on Teaching Undergraduate
Economics" (with W. Becker); "Instructor Effects
in Economic Education: Panel Data Estimates from
Elementary and Middle Schools" (with W. Bosshardt); "An Appraisal
of Economics Content in the History, Civics, Social
Studies, and Geography National Standards" (with
S. Buckles); Voluntary National Standards for K-12 Economic
Education (with a writing committee); "A Comparison
of the Views of Economists, Economic Educators, Teachers,
and Journalists on Economic Issues" (with W. Becker
and W. Walstad); "Teaching Methods for Undergraduate
Economics" (with W. Becker); "The Principles
Courses Revisited" (with G. Lynch); "How Instructors
Make a Difference: Panel Data Estimates from Principles
of Economics Courses" (with W. Bosshardt); "Economics
in Literature and Drama" (with R. Smith); "Student
Gender and School District Differences Affecting the
Stock and Flow of Economic Knowledge"; "International
Economics in U.S. High Schools: Results from a National
Survey" (with R. Highsmith); "Economic Policy
and the Lives of Contemplation, Civic Humanism, Collectivism
and Individualism"; and "School District Inputs
and Biased Estimation of Educational Production Functions."
His articles have appeared in the Journal of Economic
Education, Review of Economics and Statistics, American
Economic Review, Southern Economic Journal, Economic
Inquiry, Eastern Economic Journal, and other professional
journals. He wrote a pamphlet, "What Is a
Market Economy?" for the U.S. Information Agency that
has been translated into Russian, Polish, Korean and more than
thirty other languages. Professor Watts also co-authored
a high school textbook published by Laidlaw Brothers
(MacMillan) and has prepared other materials on economics
for elementary, secondary, and university students and
instructors, and for adult and employee education programs.
Professor Watts has served as a consultant for such
organizations as the National Council on Economic Education,
Indianapolis Children's Museum, Indianapolis Civic Theater,
Agency for Instructional Technology, Educational Testing
Services, The College Board, Internal Revenue Service,
Microsoft, TRW, B.F. Goodrich, Amoco Foundation, College
Board, International Monetary Fund, U.S. Information
Agency, and Christian Theological Seminary.
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