Friday, July 3, 2020
2017 Top 40 Undergraduate Professors Arthur van Benthem, University of Pennsylvania (Wharton)
2017 Top 40 Undergraduate Professors: Arthur van Benthem, University of Pennsylvania (Wharton) by: Andrea Carter on September 18, 2017 | 0 Comments Comments 416 Views September 18, 2017Arthur van BenthemAssistant Professor of Business Economics and Public PolicyUniversity of Pennsylvania, The Wharton Schoolà Green energy, electric cars, solar and wind power, fuel economies, and solar subsidies are just a handful of the environmental and energy issues that Whartonââ¬â¢s Arthur van Benthem conducts research in and is an expert. His work specializes in environment and energy economics and uncovers the unintended consequences of environmental legislation and economic efficiency of energy policies.In addition to his role as one of Whartonââ¬â¢s top professors, van Benthem is a faculty research fellow for the National Bureau of Economic Research and a research affiliate for the Centre for Economic Policy Research. In the last five years, heââ¬â¢s accumulated over a half mil lion dollars in grant funding to pursue his research. At the undergraduate level, he teaches a course called Environmental Energy Economics and Policy wherein by the close of the course, undergraduate students are able to make immediate, real-world applications such as the economics and finance of renewable energy and policies to increase it. Also, heavily debated subjects such as fuel-economy standards and subsidies for green vehicles. This year, van Benthem received an Excellence in Teaching award for the course.Age: 37At current institution since: 2012Education: PhD, Economics, Stanford University, 2012; BS MS, Econometrics; University of Amsterdam, 2003; in between at Royal Dutch Shell in the long-term energy scenarios team.List of courses currently teaching: Energy Environmental Economics and Policy; Energy Markets and PolicyFun fact about yourself: As a kid, I was fascinated by trains. I built an elaborate system of railway stations and trains in our back yard including a d etailed timetable and a news magazine.ââ¬Å"I knew I wanted to be a business school professor whenâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ I realized that many b-school students will move on to becoming leaders in firms that will shape societyââ¬â¢s environmental footprint. My course on energy and environment may well be the only course in this field theyââ¬â¢ll ever take. So I wanted to weigh in by teaching you how sound economic thinking can help you become a successful and environmentally responsible business leader at the same time.ââ¬Å"If I werenââ¬â¢t a business school professorâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ I would be a journalist or a politicianWhat do you enjoy most about teaching undergraduate business students? They are energetic, smart and talkative. I love playing energy strategy simulations and see the students get really competitive to make money in a complicated electricity market.What is the most impressive thing one of your undergraduate students has done? So many examples. From starting a comp any, to being accepted to Stanfordââ¬â¢s super-selective Ph.D. program in Statistics, to coding the solution to a problem that I thought was too hard to solveâ⬠¦What are your hobbies? I spend way too much time following U.S. and European politics. Other than that, I am a huge soccer fan and still think (dream) that Ajax Amsterdam is one of the major teams in Europe.Favorite place to vacation: The National Parks in the western U.S. Showing Yosemite to my two and five year old kids was amazing. I also recommend U.S. Route 395.Favorite book: Karakter. Itââ¬â¢s in Dutch, but worth the effort.Favorite type of music and/or favorite artist: Rather eclectic. I love Dire Straits, Bruce Springsteen, Dutch popular music, and country.What professional achievement are you most proud of? My teaching awards for new curriculum development. I am proud that, after a joint effort with my energy colleagues, Wharton now has a lot to offer for students who want to pursue a career in energy.What is your most memorable moment as a professor? Inviting several energy CEOs to my class and interviewing them about tough energy-environment dilemmas. For instance, right in the middle of the fossil fuel divestment movement, I could ask the President of Shell U.S. in a public forum whether Penn should keep or sell its oil company stocks. (His response was excellent, by the way.)Professor you most admire and why: Lucie Flothuis, my high school history teacher, for teaching me useful lessons about life. Cars Hommes at the University of Amsterdam for showing me what excellence in teaching means. Mark Duggan for being a star economist, energetic manager and great mentor all at the same time.What are you currently researching and what is the most significant discovery youve made from it? My research is about which types of energy and environmental policies are smart and effective, and how to distinguish them from poorly designed policies that have unintended consequences. My research on optimal solar subsidies has fed into Californiaââ¬â¢s decision making process for the ââ¬Å"California Solar Initiativeâ⬠. I also do a lot of research on vehicle policies. For instance, my co-author Mark Jacobsen at UCSD and I found that fuel-economy standards for new vehicles postpone the scrappage of dirty old vehicles, partially undermining the standardsââ¬â¢ effectiveness.à Twitter handle: @ArthurvBenthemââ¬Å"If I had my way, the business school of the future would have much more of thisâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ Courses that make students masters of collecting, processing, and statistically analyzing data, and presenting the results in an engaging and convincing way. To achieve this goal, you really need to know some modern econometrics (yes, that takes some effort, but youââ¬â¢ll be thankful in five yearsââ¬â¢ time!). No b-school student should ever be tempted to confuse correlation with causation; neither when agonizing over a key investment decision nor when readin g the newspaper.ââ¬Å"And much less of thisâ⬠Students being obsessed with and stressed about internships during their summers. Instead, you should use this unique phase of life to travel the world and take a couple more ââ¬Å"business-irrelevantâ⬠courses in whatever topic that fascinates you. Page 1 of 11
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