ECONOMICS VERTICAL ALIGNMENT

Similar documents
Academic Standards for Economics

FBLA: ECONOMICS. Competency: Basic Economic Concepts and Principles

CHAPTER 2: THE MARKET SYSTEM AND THE CIRCULAR FLOW

Economic Systems and Decision Making

What is the Basic Economic Problem?

Wells Fargo Hands on Banking & CEE National Content Standards Alignment

The Central Idea CHAPTER 1 CHAPTER OVERVIEW CHAPTER REVIEW

JA BizTown Vocabulary

Answer the next question(s) using the following data which show all available techniques for producing 20 units of a particular commodity:

WHAT IS ECONOMICS. MODULE - 1 Understanding Economics OBJECTIVES 1.1 MEANING OF ECONOMICS. Notes

Economics Social Studies Georgia Performance Standards. Economics

Chapter 8 Application: The Costs of Taxation

Economics Proposal for CORE 2014 due by February 1, 2013

K-12 Entrepreneurship Standards

Intro to Business Chapter 2: Economic Systems UNIT TEST. Name: Period: Date:

Chapter 27: Taxation. 27.1: Introduction. 27.2: The Two Prices with a Tax. 27.2: The Pre-Tax Position

ANSWERS TO END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 1: LIMITS, ALTERNATIVES, AND CHOICES

Technology, Production, and Costs

Economic Cycles EPISODE # 208

THREE KEY FACTS ABOUT ECONOMIC FLUCTUATIONS

High Flying Factors of Production LESSON 3 HIGH FLYING FACTORS OF PRODUCTION

Econ 201 Exam 1 F2002 Professor Phil Miller Name: Student Number:

NAEP released item, Grade 12

Supplement Unit 1. Demand, Supply, and Adjustments to Dynamic Change

Completion/Revision Date Approved by Board of Education on November 16, 2009

The Big Picture. Describing Data: Categorical and Quantitative Variables Population. Descriptive Statistics. Community Coalitions (n = 175)

Topic 4: Different approaches to GDP

Lesson 10 - The Circular Flow of Economic Activity

CTSO Course Alignments: Advertising and Public Relations

Investing and Corporate Finance

CHAPTER 7: AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

Chapter 6:Economies in Transition Economic systems: is a set of institutions for allocating resources and making choices to satisfy human wants.

Where are we? To do today: finish the derivation of the demand curve using indifference curves. Go on then to chapter Production and Cost

We will study the extreme case of perfect competition, where firms are price takers.

MATHEMATICAL LITERACY LESSON PLANS

Demand and Supply Examples

14.02 PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS QUIZ 3

Chapter 13. Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Analysis

DEFINITION OF A FREE (LABOR) MARKET

Lab 11: Budgeting with Excel

chapter >> First Principles Section 1: Individual Choice: The Core of Economics

Central problem in economics: how to chose among competing alternatives given the limited resources of decision-makers

MEASURING A NATION S INCOME

ECONOMICS PAPER 2/2 GRADE 12 JUNE EXAMINATION 2014 MEMORANDUM

Functions and Characteristics of Money

Newspaper Activities for Students

Figure 1. D S (private) S' (social) Quantity (tons of medicine)

economic concepts The definition of economics The nature of economics Concept map

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Skills Knowledge Energy Time People and decide how to use themto accomplish your objectives.

Economics 100 Exam 2

Grade 10. Duration 2 block periods. NC Civic Education Consortium 1 Visit our Database of K-12 Resources at

2007 Thomson South-Western

The Free Market Approach. The Health Care Market. Sellers of Health Care. The Free Market Approach. Real Income

Business and Economics Applications

The Efficiency of Markets. What is the best quantity to be produced from society s standpoint, in the sense of maximizing the net benefit to society?

Microeconomics Topic 3: Understand how various factors shift supply or demand and understand the consequences for equilibrium price and quantity.

Learning Objectives. Chapter 6. Market Structures. Market Structures (cont.) The Two Extremes: Perfect Competition and Pure Monopoly

Chapter 12: Gross Domestic Product and Growth Section 1

2014 New Jersey Core Curriculum Content Standards - Technology

Economics. Worksheet Circular Flow Simulation

Problem Set for Chapter 20(Multiple choices)

Long run v.s. short run. Introduction. Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply. In this chapter, look for the answers to these questions:

with functions, expressions and equations which follow in units 3 and 4.

Counting Money and Making Change Grade Two

Business Subject Matter Requirements. Part I: Content Domains for Subject Matter Understanding and Skill in Business

Pre Test Chapter DVD players and DVDs are: A. complementary goods. B. substitute goods. C. independent goods. D. inferior goods.

Year 6 Mathematics - Student Portfolio Summary

Use the following to answer question 9: Exhibit: Keynesian Cross

Charts, Tables, and Graphs

DEMAND AND SUPPLY. Chapter. Markets and Prices. Demand. C) the price of a hot dog minus the price of a hamburger.

INTRODUCTION TO CREDIT

Where Would You Like To Go?

Second Grade Social Studies: Local Communities. Unit 4: How Do People Work Together in a Community?

1. Supply and demand are the most important concepts in economics.

SCARCITY SCARCE RESOURCES

Web Supplement to Chapter 2

Lean Six Sigma Training The DMAIC Story. Unit 6: Glossary Page 6-1

Economics analyzing the impact of the scarcity of productive resources and examining the choices and opportunity cost that result

The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice. What is Production?

LESSON PLAN ECONOMIC AND MANAGEMENT SCIENCES GRADE 8

LECTURE NOTES ON MACROECONOMIC PRINCIPLES

Examination II. Fixed income valuation and analysis. Economics

The Age of Inventions

Solution. Solution. Monetary Policy. macroeconomics. economics

Economics. Social Studies Curriculum Framework. Revised 2006 Amended June 2009

Creating Graphs. Learning Objective-To create graphs that show data.

Procedure: Adapted by the Maryland Council on Economic Education 1

Chapter 111. Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills for Mathematics. Subchapter A. Elementary

Examples of Data Representation using Tables, Graphs and Charts

MICROECONOMIC PRINCIPLES SPRING 2001 MIDTERM ONE -- Answers. February 16, Table One Labor Hours Needed to Make 1 Pounds Produced in 20 Hours

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Scarcity and Choices Grade One

Computer Technology: Literacy and Usage KINDERGARTEN. Standard 1.0 Students will understand basic operations and concepts of technology.

WASSCE / WAEC ECONOMICS SYLLABUS

Geometer s Sketchpad. Discovering the incenter of a triangle

Chapter 9. The IS-LM/AD-AS Model: A General Framework for Macroeconomic Analysis Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved

English Language Standards. Social Studies Standards

THEME THREE: APPLY FINANCIAL PLANNING AND BUDGETING MECHANISMS. LESSON TITLE: Theme 3, Lesson 2: Money Magic

Transcription:

ECONOMICS VERTICAL ALIGNMENT COLUMBUS CITY SCHOOLS SOCIAL STUDIES OFFICE www.ccsoh.us/socialstudies.aspx

Grade K Economic Decision-Making and Skills Scarcity. People have many wants and make decisions to satisfy those wants. These decisions impact others. Production and Consumption. Goods are objects that can satisfy people s wants. Services are actions that can satisfy people s wants. Markets Financial Literacy. Wants are unlimited and resources are limited. Therefore, people make choices because they cannot have everything they want.. People produce and consume goods and services in the community.. People trade to obtain goods and services they want.. Currency is used as a means of economic exchange.. Information displayed on bar graphs can be used to compare quantities.. Resources can be used in various ways.. Most people around the world work in jobs in which they produce specific goods and services.. People use money to buy and sell goods and services.. People earn income by working.

Grade Economic Decision-Making and Skills. Line graphs are used to show changes in data over time.. Both positive and negative incentives affect people s choices and behaviors. Scarcity. Individuals must make decisions because of the scarcity of resources. Making a decision involves an opportunity cost, the value of the next best alternative given up when an economic choice is made. Production and Consumption. A consumer is a person whose wants are satisfied by using goods and services. A producer makes goods and/or provides services. Markets. A market is where buyers and sellers exchange goods and services. Financial Literacy 9. Making decisions involves weighing costs and benefits. 0. A budget is a plan to help people make personal economic decisions for the present and future and to become more financially responsible.. Tables and charts help people to understand information and issues. Tables organize information in columns and rows. Charts organize information in a variety of visual formats (pictures, diagrams, graphs).. Entrepreneurs organize productive resources and take risks to make a profit and compete with other producers.. Saving a portion of income contributes to an individual s financial wellbeing. Individuals can reduce spending to save more of their income.. Information displayed in circle graphs can be used to show relative proportions of segments of data to an entire body of data.. The choices people make have both present and future consequences.. The availability of productive resources (i.e., human resources, capital goods and natural resources) promotes specialization that leads to trade.. The availability of productive resources and the division of labor impact productive capacity.. Regions and countries become interdependent when they specialize in what they produce best and then trade with other regions to increase the amount and variety of goods and services available.. Workers can improve their ability to earn income by gaining new knowledge, skills and experiences.

Grade Economic Decision-Making and Skills. Economists compare data sets to draw conclusions about relationships among them.. The choices people make have both present and future consequences. The evaluation of choices is relative and may differ across individuals and societies. 9. Individuals, governments and businesses must analyze costs and benefits when making economic decisions. A costbenefit analysis consists of determining the potential costs and benefits of an action and then balancing the costs against the benefits.. Choices made by individuals, businesses and governments have both present and future consequences. Scarcity. The fundamental questions of economics include what to produce, how to produce and for whom to produce.. When regions and/or countries specialize, global trade occurs. 0. The variability in the distribution of productive resources in the various regions of the world contributed to specialization, trade and interdependence. Production and Consumption. The Industrial Revolution fundamentally changed the means of production as a result of improvements in technology, use of new power resources, the advent of interchangeable parts and the shift from craftwork to factory work. Markets. The interaction of supply and demand, influenced by competition, helps to determine price in a market. This interaction also determines the quantities of outputs produced and the quantities of inputs (human resources, natural resources and capital) used.. The growth of cities and empires fostered the growth of markets. Market exchanges encouraged specialization and the transition from barter to monetary economies.. Governments can impact markets by means of spending, regulations, taxes and trade barriers. Financial Literacy. When selecting items to buy, individuals can compare the price and quality of available goods and services.. The effective management of one s personal finances includes using basic banking services (e.g., savings accounts and checking accounts) and credit.

Economic Decision-Making and Skills Learning Targets I can analyze how choices made by individuals, businesses and governments have both present and future consequences. I can explain why individuals, governments and businesses must analyze costs and benefits when making economic decisions. I can describe how a cost-benefit analysis consists of determining the potential costs and benefits of an action. I can compare economic data sets to identify relationships and draw conclusions. I can predict the present and future consequences of an economic decision and explain how individuals and societies may evaluate the choice differently. I can construct a circle graph that displays information on part-to whole. I can explain the present and future consequences of an economic decision. I can use tables and charts to interpret information. I can construct line graphs showing change over time using data related to a specific topic. I can give examples of positive and negative incentives that affect people s choices and behaviors. I can construct a bar graph to compare quantities.

Scarcity Learning Targets I can discuss how the variability in the distribution of productive resources in the various regions of the world contributed to specialization, trade and interdependence. I can explain how individuals and societies answer the fundamental questions of economics. I can explain how specialization leads to global trade. I can explain how the availability of productive resources in a specific region promotes specialization and results in trade. I can describe the opportunity cost of an individual economic decision. I can describe various uses for a resource. I can explain how a decision about a want can impact others. I can explain how and why people must make economic choices.

Production and Consumption Learning Targets I can analyze how the Industrial Revolution in the late th and early 9th centuries changed the means of production. I can explain how the availability of productive resources and the division of labor influence productive capacity. I can explain characteristics of entrepreneurship, including the risks and benefits. I can identify consumers and producers in the local community. I can explain why most people work in jobs where specific goods and services are produced. I can identify goods and services. I can show how people are producers and consumers in the community.

Markets Learning Targets I can explain the impact government can have on markets by spending, regulating, taxing and creating trade barriers. I can explain how the growth of cities and empires fostered the growth of markets. I can describe how market exchanges encouraged specialization and the transition from barter to monetary economies. I can explain how supply, demand, and competition interact to determine price. I can explain how supply, demand, and competition interact to influence quantities of inputs and outputs. I can explain how specialization and trade lead to interdependency among countries of the Western Hemisphere. I can explain how people buy and sell goods using money. I can explain how people buy and sell goods using money. I can explain why people trade.

Financial Literacy Learning Targets I can demonstrate how effective management of one s personal accounts, checking accounts) and credit. I can explain how individuals compare price and quality when selecting goods and services to buy. I can identify a career of personal interest and research the knowledge, skills and experiences required to be successful. I can demonstrate how saving a portion of income contributes to an individual s financial well-being. I can explain how individuals can save more of their income by reducing spending. I can evaluate the costs and benefits of an individual economic decision. I can explain how using a budget helps individuals make responsible economic decisions. I can explain how people earn income. I can show the use of currency in an economic exchange by making real or pretend transactions.