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Related Online Lessons
 | What causes inflation? This lesson explores different types of inflation and terms associated with this economic concept. You may have heard relatives talk about the good o... Grade: 9-12 Published: 01/12/2006 |
Related Print Lessons The following lessons come from the Council for Economic
Education's library of print publications. Clicking the publication titles will take you to the Council for Economic Education Store for more detailed information. | Mathematics & Economics: Connections for Life - 9-12 Grade: 9-12 Published: 2001 7 of the 15 lessons are related to this lesson. The top 5 are listed below. Lesson 7: The Mathematics of Nonlinear Economic Shapes: The Production Possibilities Curve Because the resources (such as raw materials, minerals, energy, labor, equipment, machinery, etc.) that are used to produce goods and services are limited in their availability, we cannot have all tha... Lesson 6: The Mathematics of Linear Economic Shapes: Slopes and Elasticities As was noted in Lessons 1 - 4, a demand curve is used to describe the willingness and ability of buyers to purchase various quantities of goods and services at alternative prices. The visual represent... Lesson 4: Understanding the Mathematics of Changes in Supply and Demand This lesson asks students to look at the factors that cause a change in supply and/or a change in demand. Many factors influence the amount of a product that people are willing and able to purchase at... Lesson 5: The Gains From Trade This lesson is an application of the supply and demand tools developed in lessons 1-4. In the earlier lessons, models of supply and demand were introduced to show students how (equilibrium) prices are... Lesson 3: Equilibrium: Determining Prices and Quantities Supply and demand affect the prices people pay and the quantities they exchange in a market economy. Equilibrium is said to occur at the point at which quantity supplied equals quantity demanded. This...
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 | Capstone: Exemplary Lessons for High School Economics - Teacher's Guide Grade: 9-12 Published: 2003 8 of the 45 lessons are related to this lesson. The top 5 are listed below. Unit 2: Lesson 6 - Why Did Communism Collapse? Students examine and discuss visuals to solve an economic mystery regarding the command system of the Soviet Union. Unit 2: Lesson 14 - Secondary Effects: Price Ceilings and Floors Students investigate the consequences of price controls in markets for silver, rock concerts, automobiles, razor clams, and school textbooks. (It would be best to use this lesson after students have p... Unit 2: Lesson 7 - A Silver Market Students participate in a simulation activity that shows how a competitive market works. Although most markets for goods and services are not as competitive as the silver commodity market, the exampl... Unit 2: Lesson 10 - Equilibrium Prices and Equilibrium Quantities In examining a visual about the market for yo-yos, students think through the process of mutual accommodation among buyers and sellers that results in an equilibrium price. Students then complete an ... Unit 4: Lesson 20 - Why Helping Yourself Helps Others Students examine and discuss visuals to identify an economic mystery regarding greed and self-interest. They use economic reasoning to analyze the mystery and reach a tentative explanation.
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 | Economics in Action: 14 Greatest Hits for Teaching High School Economics Grade: 9-12 Published: 2003 1 of the 14 lessons are related to this lesson. It is listed below. Lesson 7 - A Market in Wheat Students participate as buyers or sellers in a simulation that shows how a competitive market works. They determine individual profits or losses from market transactions. They use data from the simula...
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