The Study-Leisure Trade-Off
A student faces a decision on how to divide their 24-hour day between studying for an exam and free time. They know that more hours spent studying will result in a higher final grade. In your own words, describe the fundamental trade-off this student must consider when deciding to study for one additional hour.
0
1
Tags
Science
Economy
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Related
Alexei's Production Function for Final Grade
The Student's Dilemma
A student has 24 hours in a day to allocate between free time and studying for an exam. The grade they receive is directly and positively related to the number of hours they study. If the student decides to have exactly 18 hours of free time, which statement accurately analyzes the trade-off they have made?
Evaluating Student Choices
A student must decide how to allocate their time between studying for an exam and enjoying free time. More study hours result in a higher grade, but less free time. If this student discovers a new, more efficient study technique that allows them to learn the material faster, how does this alter the trade-off they face?
Consider a student who must allocate a fixed amount of time between studying and leisure. Assume that each additional hour of studying improves their final grade, but by a progressively smaller amount. Given this relationship, the amount of leisure time the student must sacrifice to increase their grade from an 85 to a 90 is the same as the amount they must sacrifice to increase their grade from a 55 to a 60.
The Study-Leisure Trade-Off
Four students face the same situation: they can allocate their time between studying for an exam and enjoying free time. For every student, each additional hour of studying improves their potential final grade. Match each student's described objective or situation with their most likely choice regarding study time.
A student has 24 hours per day to divide between studying and free time. Their final exam grade increases with every hour they study. The student's primary goal is to achieve the highest possible grade, but they also follow a strict personal rule: they must have at least 5 hours of free time each day. Given these conditions, which of the following daily time allocations represents an illogical choice for this student?
Evaluating Student Decisions
Consider a student who must allocate a fixed 24 hours per day between studying and free time, where more study time leads to a higher grade. If this student is currently studying 8 hours per day and decides they are satisfied with their resulting grade, it implies that at this specific point, they value an additional hour of free time more than the potential grade increase they would gain from an additional hour of studying.