Productivity
Explain what productivity is and how it can increase.
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In this lesson, which includes the story Four Feet, Two Sandals, students learn about ways to allocate scarce resources. They then identify allocation methods used in different scenarios.
This lesson plan introduces elementary school students to economics and economists through readings, vocabulary, and biography projects. The included assessment requires pairs to create career day posters explaining economists' work and topics studied.
In this lesson, students listen to the story Ox-Cart Man in which a father and his family use various resources to produce goods. They participate in a simulation of the circular flow of the economy and use examples from the story to apply the concepts learned.
In this lesson, elementary students learn about consumers, goods, services, and price. They analyze how consumers generally respond to the changes in price for a good or service. From that analysis, they learn the law of demand. An assessment activity is included.
This elementary lesson plan teaches students the six characteristics of money through video, hands-on investigation, and group activities. The lesson also includes an assessment evaluating bottle caps as useful money.
This elementary lesson plan teaches students about banks' community impact through an interactive role-play simulation demonstrating loan ripple effects. An assessment is included analyzing hypothetical loan scenarios.
In this activity, students learn about creating a community and the role of government and taxes. This lesson includes a student assessment.
This active lesson has students encounter physical barriers that represent natural and government-imposed trade barriers. Students see that trade barriers reduce the flow of goods and services among countries. An assessment is included with this lesson.
This elementary lesson plan teaches students about interdependence and trade through a yarn web activity and video demonstration. The lesson contains an assessment identifying interdependent countries and explaining trade benefits.
This lesson plan teaches elementary school students about human capital investment through name tent production simulating workforce education constraints. The assessment includes analyzing a scenario, identifying existing human capital, and explaining beneficial investments.
Productivity
Explain what productivity is and how it can increase.
How Do We Get The Things We Want?
Learn more about goods and services, barter and trade, currency, and money.
Fifty Nifty Econ Cards
Use these vocabulary cards in your classroom to make economics and personal finance fun!
Teaching Economics with Baseball
This collection of microlessons combines the story of baseball the with basic economic concepts for the elementary and middle school learners.
Jobs in My Town
Learn about jobs within your community.
Ten Mile Day
Learn about competition, division of labor, and incentives.
Characteristics of Money
Teach the six characteristics of money through video, hands-on investigation, and group activities.
Hometown Bank Makes a Loan
Teach about banks' community impact through an interactive role-play simulation demonstrating loan ripple effects.
How Many Beverages Will Consumers Buy? Lesson on Demand
Learn about the law of demand and discover the relationship between price and quantity demanded.
Ox-Cart Man
Simulate the circular flow of the economy.
The Perfect Breakfast: Elementary Lesson Plan
Teach interdependence and trade concepts using yarn web activity, video, with assessment identifying trading countries.
What Makes a Community?
Learn about creating a community and the role of government and taxes.
What's Price Have to Do with It?
Learn about consumers, goods, services, and price.
Who Are Economists and What Do They Study?
Learn about a career as an economist.
You Earn When You Learn
Learn about human capital through a classroom simulation activity and assessment.
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