Flipped-Classroom Presentation Series

Emerging Technology & Finance

Authors
Affiliation

Prof. Dr. Andre Guettler

Institute of Strategic Management and Finance, Ulm University

Oliver Padmaperuma

Institute of Strategic Management and Finance, Ulm University

Overview

Six in-class group presentations across six emerging-tech topics, graded cumulatively. There is no separate exam or final-pitch event. Each session = 50% peer-allocated tokens + 50% lecturer evaluation. Final course grade = mean of the six session scores.

Group size: 4 students (lecturers allocate stragglers). Form your group by the end of Week 1 (Moodle sign-up). Weight: 100% of the final grade.

You will present six times — once per flipped week — each time on the topic that the previous regular lecture introduced. Every group presents every flipped week (there is no topic-ownership). The lecturer’s score and the peer-token score combine 50/50 to give each session’s grade; the six session grades are averaged to give the final mark.

The six sessions

Flipped week Date Topic
W2

29 October 2026

Foundations: Digital Disruption in Financial Services
W4

12 November 2026

Agentic AI & LLMs in Finance
W6

26 November 2026

Blockchain, Crypto, DeFi & Tokenisation
W8

10 December 2026

Fintech Business Models: Neobanks, Embedded Finance & Open Banking
W10

7 January 2027

RegTech, Cybersecurity & Privacy-Preserving Compute
W12

21 January 2027

CBDCs & the Future of Money

Group formation

  • Form a group of 4 by the end of Week 1 via the Moodle sign-up sheet.
  • If you don’t sign up by the deadline, the lecturers will allocate you to a group with open seats.
  • Group composition is fixed for the entire term — you cannot change groups between sessions.

Per-session deliverable

Every group prepares for every flipped session. The deliverable is a 6-minute presentation + 2-minute Q&A that covers:

  1. Specific angle — choose one application, business model, technology, regulatory question, or case study within the week’s topic. Don’t try to cover the whole topic; go deep on one slice.
  2. Concrete example — name a real company, real product, real protocol, real regulation, real incident. Show a screenshot, a chart, or (where feasible) a live demo. “In theory, X could enable Y” is weaker than “Anthropic Claude has been used by [bank] for [purpose] — here’s how it works.”
  3. Critical evaluation — what works, what doesn’t, what’s missing, who loses. Avoid sales-pitch tone; you are appraising, not endorsing.
  4. Discussion prompts — 1–2 questions you want the room (or the lecturers) to react to. Strong prompts earn peer tokens.

Submission format

  • Slide PDF uploaded to Moodle before the flipped session begins (5 minutes prior is the absolute deadline; earlier is better).
  • File name: ETF_W<NN>_group-<id>.pdf (e.g. ETF_W04_group-3.pdf).
  • 6 minutes is firm — practice. The lecturer will signal at 5:30 and stop the presentation at 6:00 regardless of where you are.
  • Late slide submissions are graded down by 10 percentage points per started 30-min period (i.e. an upload 5 min after the session start loses 10 points).

Token allocation rules

Each group receives 20 fresh tokens at the end of every flipped session to distribute among the other groups.

  • No self-allocation. The Moodle quiz rejects submissions where the group allocates to itself.
  • Total must equal 20. Distribution at the group’s discretion — all 20 to one group, evenly split, anywhere in between.
  • 5-minute window. The Moodle quiz opens when the last group finishes presenting and closes 5 minutes later. Allocations submitted after the window are discarded; that group’s tokens for that week count as zero (i.e. you lose your influence on the peer ranking, but you don’t penalise anyone).
  • One submission per group. The group nominates a representative for each session; the representative submits on behalf of the group.
  • The allocation rubric — weigh each candidate group on:
    • Insight: did they teach you something you didn’t know?
    • Originality: did they pick a fresh angle or critique?
    • Clarity: could you follow them?
    • Critical depth: did they appraise honestly or pitch uncritically?

Anti-collusion check

The lecturers audit peer-token patterns at the end of the term. Coordinated token-trading between two groups (e.g. “you give us 15, we give you 15, every week”) undermines the grading structure and is treated as an academic-integrity issue. Flagged cases trigger a review; in the worst case, peer-token scores are replaced by the lecturer score for the affected weeks.

Grading formula

For each session \(s\):

\[ \text{session-score}_s \;=\; 0.5 \times \frac{\text{tokens received by your group}_s}{\max\big(\text{tokens received by any group}_s\big)} \times 100 \;+\; 0.5 \times \text{lecturer-score}_s \]

The lecturer-score is on a 0–100 scale, applied with the same rubric (insight · originality · clarity · critical depth) and an additional delivery axis (timing discipline, slide quality).

Final course grade:

\[ \text{final-grade} \;=\; \frac{1}{6} \sum_{s=1}^{6} \text{session-score}_s \]

mapped to the German scale (1.0 best, 5.0 fail; 4.0 passing).

Honor code

By submitting slides each week, you confirm that the work is your group’s own, that all sources are cited, and that any AI assistance has been disclosed (one footnote per slide deck stating tool and use).