Lecture Notes Currently Available Online
These lecture notes are provided as a service to students in the class to facilitate note-taking during class. Sometimes, although I hope rarely, you will find errors in my notes. These are lecture notes that I produce for my own use. I do not edit them to ensure they are completely appropriate and accurate for student usage although they usually are. All the notes are copyrighted. Make sure to read the caveats and suggested uses of these notes at the bottom of this page.
All lecture notes are copyright of Ronald Mitchell.
Links will "go live" as lecture notes become available.
- September 28, 2010: Lecture 1
- September 30, 2010: Lecture 2
- October 5, 2010: Lecture 3
- PRINT OUT Prisoner's Dilemma Game Instructions AND score sheet before Week 2 Section Meeting. -- this game will be played in class (so just come in prepared but you don't need to play the game beforehand)
- October 7, 2010: Lecture 4
- October 12, 2010: Lecture 5
- October 14, 2010: Lecture 6
- October 19, 2010: Lecture 7
- October 21, 2010: Lecture 8
- October 26, 2010: Lecture 9
- October 28, 2010: Lecture 10
- November 2, 2010: Midterm -- essay question is now posted in Announcements on Blackboard -- Bring your own Exam Books for the essay -- we will supply scantron forms for the multiple choice part of the exam.
- November 4, 2010: Lecture 12
- Development Statistics Slide from lecture
- November 9, 2010: Lecture 13
- November 11, 2010: Lecture 14 -- Guest Lecture by Craig Parsons -- lecture notes not available
- November 16, 2010: Lecture 15
- November 18, 2010: Lecture 16
- November 23, 2010: Lecture 17
- November 25, 2010: Thanksgiving -- No Class
- November 30, 2010: Lecture 19
- December 2, 2010: Lecture 20 -- Review Session
Caveats and suggested usage for these notes
- They are not a substitute for class attendance.
- They do not provide complete coverage of the topics that will be discussed during any given lecture and may have very little relationship to the content of a lecture.
- They currently follow the planned schedule for the course but, they may not correspond exactly to the scheduled lecture dates. Attending class will be crucial both to knowing what was covered in lectures and in what sequence.
- Download notes for all classes as they become available.
- Print them out double-spaced or with a wide right-hand margin so there will be room for making annotations and additions during lecture.
- Put them in a three ring binder with additional pages at each lecture for notes beyond those on the lectures themselves.