Maxwell School :: Economics :: Program of Distinction in Economics

ECONOMICS 400.2/499.2
UNDERGRADUATE DISTINCTION SEMINAR II

Seminar Description | Seminar Requirements

|Seminar Schedule

SEMINAR DESCRIPTION

        This seminar is the second semester in a year-long course for economics undergraduate thesis students.  An undergraduate thesis has long been a signal of academic excellence and achievement in a major field of study.  The creation and execution of a project of one’s own design is often the most rewarding experience of an undergraduate career.  The project immerses the student in sustained intellectual activity, encourages depth of inquiry, and develops research, writing, and presentation skills. Our year-long sequence is designed to support the student through this process.  As such, it requires the student to work in close consultation with the instructor and with other members of the seminar.  Through these interactions, the student is engaged in an intellectual community focused on the creation of economic research 

        Economics 400 (ECN 499:2 for Renee Crown Honors students) is open only to students selected for the Economics Distinction Program.  It offers Distinction students the opportunity to carry out the research that they proposed in the detailed thesis project proposal completed in ECN 400:1.  Seminar participants will present their thesis chapters, constructively comment on the ideas of other participants, learn about research tools on campus and beyond, and struggle with the ideals of research integrity and research quality.

         The ECN 400 course sequence culminates in the completion of the Thesis Project and, for those who also maintain a minimum 3.4 cumulative grade point average, graduation with Distinction in Economics.

SEMINAR REQUIREMENTS

This seminar is designed to meet the needs of Economics thesis writers as they execute their thesis research plan.  As such, our course schedule is fluid and participants will need to pay close attention to the class schedule.  Our course website has a class schedule that will be updated regularly.  Students should refer to the website if there is a doubt about any day’s activities and readings.  Please note the firm deadlines for thesis presentations and submission of thesis drafts and final versions.

 Seminar participants are required to attend all sessions and to participate actively in seminar discussions.  A participant must notify the instructor IN ADVANCE if he or she must miss a seminar session for unavoidable reasons.  The instructor can ALWAYS be contacted by email or telephone.  Unexcused seminar absences will result in a lower course grade.

DATE                                                              

GRADING ELEMENT SHARE OF FINAL GRADE
Seminar Assignments 25
Seminar Participation 25
Thesis Project 50

 

        As always, students will be held to the highest standards of academic honesty:  For thesis writers, academic honesty issues go beyond the familiar prohibition against cheating on exams and assignments.  Proper treatment of the words and ideas of others, citation methods, and how to incorporate previous research into our own work while giving credit to the creators of this work has been discussed in ECN 400:1.  Please ask the instructor if you have any doubts about the proper way to credit the contributions of others.

        In compliance with section 504 of the Americans with Disabilities Act, Syracuse University is committed to full participation by students with disabilities.  If you feel that you need academic accommodations due to a disability, you should immediately register with the Office of Disability Services (ODS) at 804 University Ave., Room 309, 443-4498 or 443-1371 (TDD only).  ODS is the Syracuse University office that authorizes special accommodations for students with disabilities.

REQUIRED MATERIALS

            We will be reading material from economics scholarly journals, work in progress, and work by each other.  These materials are freely available through the library website or from each other.  Accordingly, seminar participants will need access to an Acrobat reader, either on a personal computer or at a campus cluster.  Each participant also needs access to PowerPoint, again either on a personal computer or at a campus cluster.  We will discuss access to other software as we progress. 

SEMINAR SCHEDULE

January       February       March       April       May

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What is  Distinction in Economics?

 

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Information for New Students

 

 Undergraduate Thesis  Seminar I

 

 Undergraduate Thesis Seminar II

 

2007 Distinction Students

 

2006 Distinction Students

 

 2005 Distinction Students

 

Places to Publish

 

Renee Crown Honors Program