What Are Incentives?
Students will understand that incentives are used to encourage them to make good choices. After identifying incentives offered at home and in schoo...
Grade: K-2 3-5    Published: 01/03/2003


The Little Red Hen
The Little Red Hen is a classic story for nearly all adults, and many children. Here it is retold and enhanced in order to provide a framework for ...
Grade: K-2 3-5    Published: 01/20/2003


Build Your Community
Students will learn about a variety of businesses and the service they provide to a community. They will build a town selecting seven business they...
Grade: K-2    Published: 10/12/2002


Marketplace: Doing Business in Afghanistan
In May 2002, delegates from governments, international companies, and financial institutions met at a United Nations conference in Tehran to discuss t...
Grade: 6-8 9-12    Published: 02/26/2009


Marketplace: School Competition
In June 2002, the Supreme Court ruled that Cleveland's system of giving students vouchers to attend private or religious schools did not violate the c...
Grade: 9-12    Published: 07/15/2008


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.

Financial Fitness for Life: Pocket Power - Grades K-2 - Teacher GuideFinancial Fitness for Life: Pocket Power - Grades K-2 - Teacher Guide
Grade: K-2   Published: 2001
8 of the 16 lessons are related to this lesson. The top 5 are listed below.


Theme 3: Lesson 8 - We Are Consumers
Students discover that they are consumers. As they fill their pockets with pictures of wants, students learn that consumers want both goods and services. As they try to help Nicholas choose a pet, a...
Theme 3: Lesson 9 - We Decide to Spend
Students create want webs for a hamster and then for themselves. They experience spending money in exchange for goods and services when they use dimes to become consumers at a school carnival.
Theme 3: Lesson 11 - Ads Make Us Spend
Students examine various forms of advertising and discover why companies advertise their products. They watch television commercials to answer questions about products advertised and consumer wants. ...
Theme 2: Lesson 6 - How We Save
The class hears a story about Nicholas's family during a time of unexpected financial emergency. Students experience scarcity as they try to fit everything they want into a pocket. They learn about ...
Theme 3: Lesson 10 - We Plan for Spending
Students construct traffic lights and use them in evaluating consumer decisions as planned or unplanned spending. Students discuss the costs and benefits of each decision.

Master Curriculum Guides in Economics: Teaching Strategies - K-2Master Curriculum Guides in Economics: Teaching Strategies - K-2
Grade: K-2   Published: 1993
7 of the 25 lessons are related to this lesson. The top 5 are listed below.


Unit 3: Lesson 15 - Bulletin Board: Scarcity Balloon Trip
Students take a make-believe balloon trip to places far away as they create a bulletin board display depicting scarcity and opportunity cost.
Unit 3: Lesson 13 - We Decide
Students choose from a set of group activities as they learn to make decisions, identify opportunity cost, and evaluate their choices.
Unit 3: Lesson 14 - Learning Center: Choice Train
Students practice making choices and identifying their opportunity costs as they fill their wants from the Choice Train cars.
Unit 3: Lesson 12 - Opportunities for Appreciation
Students learn about choice and opportunity cost as they use their scarce resources to produce gifts of appreciation for workers in their school.
Unit 5: Lesson 25 - Bulletin Board: Teddy Bear Picnic
Students prepare for and participate in a picnic with their teddy bears as they learn about markets and prices.

Capstone: Exemplary Lessons for High School Economics - Teacher's GuideCapstone: Exemplary Lessons for High School Economics - Teacher's Guide
Grade: 9-12   Published: 2003
9 of the 45 lessons are related to this lesson. The top 5 are listed below.


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 6 - Why Did Communism Collapse?
Students examine and discuss visuals to solve an economic mystery regarding the command system of the Soviet Union.
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.
Unit 2: Lesson 11 - Do Prices Matter to Consumers?
This lesson demonstrates how people use prices when they weight expected costs and expected benefits in making economic decisions. It helps students see how choosing a second-best good or service can...
Unit 1: Lesson 5 - Rules Influence Economic Behavior
The lesson begins with a demonstration of how rules and incentives influence students' behavior in the classroom. Then students apply the same analysis to behavior in the larger economy. (WARNING: ...

Choices & Changes: In Life, School, & Work - Grades 2-4 - Teacher's Resource ManualChoices & Changes: In Life, School, & Work - Grades 2-4 - Teacher's Resource Manual
Grade: 2-4   Published: 2001
2 of the 18 lessons are related to this lesson. They are listed below.


Unit 4: Lesson 16 - Entrepreneurs and the Interdependence of Buyers and Sellers
People often think of themselves as consumers, but not as producers. In this lesson, students will meet business owners, managers, and entrepreneurs so that they can identify with them and perhaps as...
Unit 1: Lesson 4 - Choice
In this lesson, students should recognize that they have the power to choose and that they do make many choices. Many people feel powerless because they think they don't make choices.

Economics in Action: 14 Greatest Hits for Teaching High School EconomicsEconomics 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 3 - Using Economic Reasoning To Solve Mysteries
Students ponder an economic mystery: Why do professional athletes, many of whom never finish college, earn far higher salaries than people who perform worthy services such as teachers and firefighter...

 

 
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