PACED Pretzels
Learn about and apply the five-step PACED decision-making process.
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In this lesson, students learn about and apply the five-step PACED decision-making process through a series of activities, including a taste test.
In this lesson, students identify ways in which people invest in human capital and learn about the link between investment in human capital and earning income.
Lesson PowerPoint Slides / Answer Key
This high-school-level lesson plan teaches students about economics careers through research activities exploring famous economics graduates and career fields. The assessment requires students to write an essay analyzing career options and comparing median incomes.
In this activity, students learn a key economic idea: voluntary trade can make both the buyer and seller better off. Students trade candy with different groups of students to see how increasing trade affects welfare.
This lesson teaches students about supply and demand through a cocoa bean market simulation where they negotiate prices as buyers and sellers over multiple trading rounds. Students learn to identify equilibrium price, explain how market interactions determine prices, and recognize conditions that create shortages and surpluses.
Students play the role of producers in two fictional countries and discover that if they specialize and trade, they can produce and consume more goods than they would have been able to produce and consume on their own.
This lesson teaches students about the circular flow model through a simulation where they role-play as households and businesses in resource and product markets. Students learn to identify productive resources, income payments, and economic relationships.
In this active learning lesson, students learn about gross domestic product (GDP) and its components using the expenditures equation. The lesson clarifies the effect that imports have on GDP.
This activity is designed to be used as a classroom example to show students how to calculate the civilian unemployment rate.
Students participate in two auctions: the goods in each auction are identical, but the amount of money given to students increases from the first to the second auction. Students learn that if spending grows at a faster rate than the economy's ability to produce goods and services, inflation will result. This inflation is caused by "too much spending chasing too few goods."
PACED Pretzels
Learn about and apply the five-step PACED decision-making process.
Is Trade a Zero-Sum Game?
Demonstrate that voluntary trade can benefit buyers and sellers.
How Do We Measure Unemployment?
Demonstrate how we calculate the civilian unemployment rate.
The GDP Expenditures Equation: How Do We Measure It?
Learn about gross domestic product (GDP)
Exploring Careers in Economics
Learn about careers for people with backgrounds studying economics.
The CPI Market Basket
Compare the price of goods and interpret the effects of inflation on consumers.
Comparative Advantage: Trading Brownies and Pizza
Discover the benefits of trade.
Teaching About Money, Spending, & Inflation Using an Auction
Conduct two rounds of auctioning off the same goods with increasing money to demonstrate inflationary forces.
The Basics of Supply and Demand: A Classroom Cocoa Bean Market
Learn to identify equilibrium price, explain how market interactions determine prices, and recognize conditions that create shortages and surpluses.
Circular Flow
Simulate the circular flow model and learn about economic relationships.
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