Courses tagged with "Structural+engineering" (100)
This course uses theoretical models and empirical studies to help understand the economics behind various internet businesses. We will begin with a discussion of relevant topics from industrial organization (IO) including monopoly pricing, price discrimination, product differentiation, and barriers to entry. The main part of the course will be a discussion of a number of online businesses. In the context of those businesses, we will discuss extensions and applications of the ideas from the first section of the course.
This course integrates psychological insights into economic models of behavior. It discusses the limitations of standard economic models and surveys the ways in which psychological experiments have been used to learn about preferences, cognition, and behavior. Topics include: trust, vengeance, fairness, impatience, impulsivity, bounded rationality, learning, reinforcement, classical conditioning, loss-aversion, over-confidence, self-serving biases, cognitive dissonance, altruism, subjective well-being, and hedonic adaptation. Economic concepts such as equilibrium, rational choice, utility maximization, Bayesian beliefs, game theory, and behavior under uncertainty are discussed in light of these phenomena.
This course will guide students through the process of forming economic hypotheses, gathering the appropriate data, analyzing them, and effectively communicating their results.
Kursbeschreibung
In der Veranstaltung "Einführung in das Rechnungswesen" erlernst du die kaufmännische Sprache des Unternehmens. Damit kannst du Finanzberichte lesen, verstehen und interpretieren. Du kannst Entscheidungen kostenrechnerisch vorbereiten, Produkte bewerten und Kostenabweichungen analysieren. Damit kannst du unternehmerisch sowohl in die Vergangenheit als auch in die Zukunft schauen. Der Inhalt der Vorlesung umfasst den kompletten Stoff einer umfassenden Einführung in das Rechnungswesen (internes und externes Rechnungswesen), wie er an vielen Universitäten und Hochschulen in Deutschland gelehrt wird.
Planspiel
Als besonderes Feature gibt es zu der Veranstaltung das Rechnungswesen-MOOC Planspiel der Firma Simucate. Das Planspiel bietet eine interaktive Möglichkeit, die Studieninhalte gleich praktisch anzuwenden und so besser zu verstehen. Das Planspiel ist in allen Klausurpaketen enthalten. Alternativ kann es im Audit Track während des Kurses für 19 Euro hinzu gebucht werden.
Was lerne ich in diesem Kurs
Nach erfolgreichem Kursabschluss beherrschst du die Grundlagen des betriebswirtschaftlichen Rechnungswesens als kaufmännische Sprache von Unternehmen. Du kennst dich in Grundfragen der Buchführung ebenso aus wie auf dem Gebiet des internen Rechnungswesens. Du kannst Finanzberichte aufstellen, die doppelte Buchführung durchführen und Kosten mithilfe des internen Rechnungswesens dokumentierten, planen und überwachen. Damit bist du in der Lage, Entscheidungen wirtschaftlich fundiert zu analysieren.
Welche Vorkenntnisse benötige ich?
Die Teilnahme ist ohne spezielle Vorkenntnisse möglich.
Kursstruktur
Der Kurs besteht aus 7 Module von jeweils 2 Wochen:
Modul 1: Einführung und Abbildung von Eigenkapitalveränderungen
Modul 2: Doppelte Buchführung und Verbuchung von Geschäftsvorfällen
Modul 3: Buchungen am Ende des Abrechnungszeitraums und Abschlussarbeiten
Modul 4: Einführung in das interne Rechnungswesen
Modul 5: Kostenträgerrechnung
Modul 6: Kostenstellen- und Kostenartenrechnung
Modul 7: Unternehmenssteuerung, Planungsrechnungen und Kostenabweichungen
Kombi-Paket
Besuche diesen Kurs in Verbindung mit dem RWTH-MOOC "Einführung in die Betriebswirtschaftslehre" von Prof. Frank Piller. Gemeinsam bieten beide Kurse eine ausgezeichnete Einführung in die BWL und übermitteln dir das notwendige Handlungswissen und Vokabular, um im Studium oder Beruf mitreden zu können. Als besonderes Highlight bieten wir hierfür Kombinationspakete im Schüler-Track und ECTS-Track an, mit denen du Zertifikate für beide Kurse zu einem vergünstigten Preis inkl. des Planspiels erhältst.
Kursbeschreibung
Dieser Kurs gibt einen Überblick über grundlegende Modelle, Theorien und Prinzipien der Betriebswirtschaftslehre. Er basiert auf einer mehrfach ausgezeichneten äquivalenten Lehrveranstaltung an der RWTH Aachen und wurde bislang von über 10.000 Studierenden erfolgreich in Aachen absolviert. Der Kurs beginnt mit den Fragen, warum es Unternehmen gibt und was der Kern unternehmerischer Wertschöpfung ist. Anschließend wird analysiert, welche Alternativen und Theorien es zur Organisation von Unternehmen gibt. Ein Schwerpunkt auf die neue Institutionenökonomie erlaubt dabei einen Einblick in einen der Ansätze, der das moderne Management entscheidend geprägt hat. In den letzten beiden Teilen werden Prinzipien der operativen und der strategischen Planung sowie Wettbewerbsstrategien behandelt. Anhand ausgewählter Konzepte lernen die Teilnehmenden die wichtigsten Ansätze des strategischen Managements kennen.
Planspiel
Als besonderes Feature gibt es zu der Veranstaltung das BWL-MOOC Planspiel der Firma Simucate. Das Planspiel: Es bietet Ihnen eine interaktive Möglichkeit, die Studieninhalte gleich praktisch anzuwenden und so besser zu verstehen. Das Planspiel ist in allen Klausurpaketen enthalten. Zusätzlich kann es während des Kurses für 19 Euro hinzu gebucht werden. Sollten Sie sich dazu entscheiden, den ECTS-Track zu belegen ist das Planspiel für Sie bereits inklusive. Die Ergebnisse des Planspiels fließen dann zu 20% in die Endnote der Veranstaltung mit ein.
Was lerne ich in diesem Kurs?
- Du kennst grundlegende Denkweisen der Betriebswirtschaftslehre.
- Du kannst wesentliche Fachbegriffe ebenso wie grundlegende Konzepte auf aktuelle Fragestellungen übertragen.
- Du kannst einen Bezug zwischen den theoretisch vermittelten Kursinhalten und der unternehmerischen Praxis herstellen.
- Du bekommst eine kritisch-reflektierte Herangehensweise an wirtschaftliche Fragestellungen.
- Du bekommst einen Rahmen für weitere vertiefende Vorlesungen im Bereich BWL.
Welche Vorkenntnisse benötige ich?
Die Teilnahme ist ohne spezielle Vorkenntnisse möglich. Mathematik auf mind. Oberstufenniveau ist für Modul 5 erforderlich.
Kursstruktur
Dieser Kurs besteht aus 7 Modulen von jeweils 2 Wochen:
Modul 1: Grundzüge und Funktionen der Unternehmung
Videos ab 02. Nov, interaktive Vorlesung in Aachen am 02. Nov 2015
Modul 2: Organisationstheorien: Der Weg zum Taylorismus und dessen Überwindung
Videos ab 16. Nov, interaktive Vorlesung in Aachen am 16. Nov 2015
Modul 3: Gestaltung der Organisationsstruktur
Videos ab 30. Nov, interaktive Vorlesung in Aachen am 30. Nov 2015
Modul 4: Neue Institutionenökonomik
Videos ab 14. Dez, interaktive Vorlesung in Aachen am 14. Dez 2015
Modul 5: Operative Planung
Videos ab 11. Jan, interaktive Vorlesung in Aachen am 11. Jan 2016
Modul 6: Strategische Planung & Wettbewerbsstrategie
Videos ab 25. Jan, interaktive Vorlesung in Aachen am 25. Jan 2015
This course explores the theoretical and empirical perspectives on individual and industrial demand for energy, energy supply, energy markets, and public policies affecting energy markets. It discusses aspects of the oil, natural gas, electricity, and nuclear power sectors and examines energy tax, price regulation, deregulation, energy efficiency and policies for controlling emission.
This course explores the theoretical and empirical perspectives on individual and industrial demand for energy, energy supply, energy markets, and public policies affecting energy markets. It discusses aspects of the oil, natural gas, electricity, and nuclear power sectors and examines energy tax, price regulation, deregulation, energy efficiency and policies for controlling emission.
This course explores the theory behind and evidence on regulatory, tax, and other government responses to problems of market failure. Special emphasis is given to developing and implementing tools to evaluate environmental policies. Other topics include cost-benefit analysis, measurement of the benefits of non-market goods and costs of regulations, and the evaluation of the impact of regulations in areas such as financial markets, workplace health and safety, consumer product safety, and other contexts.
This course explores the proper role of government in the regulation of the environment. It will help students develop the tools to estimate the costs and benefits of environmental regulations. These tools will be used to evaluate a series of current policy questions, including: Should air and water pollution regulations be tightened or loosened? What are the costs of climate change in the U.S. and abroad? Is there a "Race to the Bottom" in environmental regulation? What is "sustainable development"? How do environmental problems differ in developing countries? Are we running out of oil and other natural resources? Should we be more energy efficient? To gain real world experience, the course is scheduled to include a visit to the MIT cogeneration plant. We will also do an in-class simulation of an air pollution emissions market.
This course is an introduction to the economic theories of financial crises. It focuses on amplification mechanisms that exacerbate crises, such as leverage, fire sales, bank runs, interconnections, and complexity. It also analyzes the different perspectives on the origins of crises, such as mistaken beliefs and moral hazard, and discusses the optimal regulation of the financial system. The course draws upon examples from financial crises around the world, especially the recent subprime financial crisis.
14.09 is offered during the Independent Activities Period (IAP), which is a special 4-week term at MIT that runs from the first week of January until the end of the month.
Financial institutions are a pillar of civilized society, supporting people in their productive ventures and managing the economic risks they take on. The workings of these institutions are important to comprehend if we are to predict their actions today and their evolution in the coming information age. The course strives to offer understanding of the theory of finance and its relation to the history, strengths and imperfections of such institutions as banking, insurance, securities, futures, and other derivatives markets, and the future of these institutions over the next century.
This course attempts to explain the role and the importance of the financial system in the global economy. Rather than separating off the financial world from the rest of the economy, financial equilibrium is studied as an extension of economic equilibrium. The course also gives a picture of the kind of thinking and analysis done by hedge funds.
This course explores the foundations of policy making in developing countries. The goal is to spell out various policy options and to quantify the trade-offs between them. We will study the different facets of human development: education, health, gender, the family, land relations, risk, informal and formal norms and institutions. This is an empirical class. For each topic, we will study several concrete examples chosen from around the world. While studying each of these topics, we will ask: What determines the decisions of poor households in developing countries? What constraints are they subject to? Is there a scope for policy (by government, international organizations, or non-governmental organizations (NGOs))? What policies have been tried out? Have they been successful?
This course is an introduction to game theory and strategic thinking. Ideas such as dominance, backward induction, Nash equilibrium, evolutionary stability, commitment, credibility, asymmetric information, adverse selection, and signaling are discussed and applied to games played in class and to examples drawn from economics, politics, the movies, and elsewhere.
This course provides a rigorous treatment of non-cooperative solution concepts in game theory, including rationalizability and Nash, sequential, and stable equilibria. It covers topics such as epistemic foundations, higher order beliefs, bargaining, repeated games, reputation, supermodular games, and global games. It also introduces cooperative solution concepts—Nash bargaining solution, core, Shapley value—and develops corresponding non-cooperative foundations.
The objective of this course is to introduce you to the role of government in markets where competitive equilibria “fail.” In this course we will emphasize the importance of market structure and industrial performance, including the strategic interaction of firms. We will examine the behavior of individual markets in some detail, focusing on cost analysis, the determinants of market demand, investment behavior, market power, and the implications of government regulatory behavior. The course will be broken into three parts. In the first part, we will review firm behavior and the theory of the market. Here, we will discuss perfectly competitive markets (our “benchmark”), efficiency, market structure, strategic competition, and productivity. Once the foundations of the market are well understood, we will then move on to the second part of the course, where we will study “economic” regulation. Here, we will look at the behavior of natural monopolies and regulatory options for dealing with them. And in the third part of the course, we will study “social” regulation—focusing on environmental, health, and safety regulation.
Dieser Kurs vermittelt die Grundzüge des Marketings und gibt einen Überblick von Konzepten, Strategien und Werkzeugen. Im Zentrum des Kurses stehen vier Themenbereiche: Produkt-, Kommunikations-, Preis- und Distributionspolitik.
Course Summary
The MOOC ‘Idea Generation Methods’ aims to explain techniques for the goal and process oriented generation of ideas. Idea generation is part of the fuzzy front end of the innovation process. Participants have the possibility to work on specific innovation topics in the area of sustainable energy. Dr. Daniel J. Koch will impart a broadly diversified knowledge of the methods used in idea generation and he will show you how you can use them by your own.
The MOOC is offered by KIC InnoEnergy, the European company for innovation, business creation and education in sustainable energy and was produced by the Center for Technology-Enhanced Learning (ZML) at Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT).
The course language is English, and the workload is about 4h/week.
The aim of the course is to enable participants to apply methods of idea generation on their own project.
Who is this course for?
Everyone who is curios in Idea Generation Methods and who is having an interesting topic which could be further developed.
What will I learn?
Participants will be able to understand and apply certain methods of idea generation on any self-chosen topic. For example, participants will understand and will be able to apply methods like Mindmapping & Clustering, 6-3-5, World Cafe & DeBono Hats, Concept Mapping, Scenario Techniques ( e.g. STEEP), Roadmapping and many more in a structured process.
What do I need to know?
No prior knowledge is necessary. You just need to be curious about Idea Generation Methods and have an interesting topic you would like to develop further.
Course Structure
The course consists of 7 chapters:
Chapter 1 - Introduction:
The sketch in your head! Strategic Innovation Management, Idea Generation Process, Innovation Process and fuzzy front end
Chapter 2 - Design Factors:
What's in your picture? Design Aspects, Methods, Sources
Chapter 3 - Defining your Search Space:
Landscape or portrait? Context Definition, Agenda Setting, Problem Representation
Chapter 4 - Scenario:
What's my perspective? Definition of Scenario Topic, STEEP / PESTEL Analysis, Influence Factors and Descriptors
Chapter 5 - Future Assumptions:
Using watercolour or oil? Present Situation and Future Assumptions, Bundling Projection, Interpretation of Scenario, Wild Cards, SWOT, Proposals for Action
Chapter 6 - Scenario-based Roadmapping:
What to draw when? Definition of a Roadmapping Topic, Needs Analysis, Analysis of Potentials
Chapter 7 - Establishing your roadmap:
Sketching your picture! Establishing a Roadmap, Consistency Analysis and Evaluation

This is a course in industrial organization, the study of firms in markets. Industrial organization focuses on firm behavior in imperfectly competitive markets, which appear to be far more common than the perfectly competitive markets that were the focus of your basic microeconomics course. This field analyzes the acquisition and use of market power by firms, strategic interactions among firms, and the role of government competition policy. We will approach this subject from both theoretical and applied perspectives.
The course provides a graduate level introduction to Industrial Organization. It is designed to provide a broad introduction to topics and industries that current researchers are studying as well as to expose students to a wide variety of techniques. It will start the process of preparing economics PhD students to conduct thesis research in the area, and may also be of interest to doctoral students working in other areas of economics and related fields. The course integrates theoretical models and empirical studies.
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