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Related Online Lessons
 | Fed Orders Interest Rate Cut On October 15, 1998 Alan Greenspan and the Board of Governors, in a surprise move ordered short-term interest rates cut by 0.25%. What prompted the... Grade: 9-12 Published: 10/12/1998 |
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. | Civics and Government: Focus on Economics Grade: 9-12 Published: 1996 3 of the 16 lessons are related to this lesson. They are listed below. Unit 3: Lesson 7 - Who Should Control the Money Supply - the U.S. Congress or the Federal Reserve? Students learn that the basic U.S. money supply consists of currency in circulation and checking account balances in banks. They learn that the money supply increases when banks make loans, and that ... Unit 3: Lesson 6 - How Can Changes in the Federal Government's Budget Stabilize the Economy? The teacher discusses with the class how a market economy like that of the United States goes through the Business Cycle of unstable swings in economic activity. The students then write and perform a... Unit 2: Lesson 5 - How Has Federal Government Spending Changed? They review the definitions of government purchases and transfer payments and categorize the listed expenditures. Finally, given Federal government budget data, they draw graphs of the relative impor...
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 | Economics in Action: 14 Greatest Hits for Teaching High School Economics Grade: 9-12 Published: 2003 2 of the 14 lessons are related to this lesson. They are listed below. Lesson 12 - Fiscal Policy: A Two-Act Play Groups of students are given outlines for one of two acts in a play describing either expansionary or contractionary fiscal policy. After the students choose parts and prepare lines for their roles, t... Lesson 11 - Money and Inflation Students observe a simple demonstration to determine the functions that money performs. They next participate in two rounds of an auction illustrating how increases in the money supply lead to inflati...
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 | Focus: High School Economics Grade: 9-12 Published: 2001 3 of the 21 lessons are related to this lesson. They are listed below. Lesson 20: Aggregate Supply and Demand: The Sum of Their Parts, and More Over the last two decades, the most dramatic pedagogical innovation in teaching introductory economics has been the use of aggregate supply and demand curves to illustrate key macroeconomic concepts a... Lesson 19: Money, Interest, and Monetary Policy Growth of the money supply is related to inflation. This lesson examines how money supply growth rates can lead to inflation when they outpace the growth in output. To maintain price stability and s... Lesson 18: Economic Ups and Downs News reports about the economy often refer to data concerning economic growth, recessions, inflation, and unemployment. Students (and adults) should understand these data and how they both reflect an...
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 | Capstone: Exemplary Lessons for High School Economics - Teacher's Guide Grade: 9-12 Published: 2003 3 of the 45 lessons are related to this lesson. They are listed below. Unit 6: Lesson 35 - Fiscal Policy: A Two-Act Play Groups of students are given outlines for one of two acts in a play describing either expansionary or contractionary fiscal policy. After choosing parts and preparing lines for their roles, two group... Unit 6: Lesson 34 - Money and Monetary Policy The concept of money creation by banks is often not intuitive for students, but it is important to their understanding of the role of the Federal Reserve. In this lesson, students first discuss money... Unit 6: Lesson 36 - Should We Worry About the National Debt? Students discuss the size of the current national debt and what this means. A class discussion covers the causes of the debt, how it is financed, definitions of a budget deficit and budget surplus, a...
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