- I know it has been said before and shows up on almost every page of economics education links in existence, but EconEdLink is amazing. It has literally hundreds of lesson plans and helps teachers to stay up-to-date on current national GDP, CPI, inflation rates, unemployment rates, etc.
- The Journal of Economic Education is not a specific website, but it publishes articles relating to the latest research on teaching economics, from grading to promoting student achievement in economics to gender differences in studying economics. CSB/SJU has access to the journal articles through jstor.org.
- It may be a bit advanced for middle school students, but I absolutely loved the stock market competition in my economics class. Students invest a certain amount of money in virtual stocks (my partner and I bought Apple and 3M) that gain and lose value as the corresponding real stocks gain and lose value. This helps students learn how the stock market works in a very memorable way. I will never forget beginning the game on a day in 2007 when the market began a sudden and significant nosedive!
- The American Economics Association and Internet 4 Classrooms both post lengthy lists of other resources for learning and teaching economics. The links include lesson plans, organizations, blogs, and information about the subject itself.
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Economics + Education = Econucation
The internet is full of websites that can help teachers to teach mid-level economics. Most of what I found was lists of websites and lesson plans, but here are a few highlights of my search:
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I love the way you used morphological awareness to create the title for this blog post! Thoughtful and informative post!
ReplyDeleteThanks! I like interesting titles for things, which sometimes translates to jumbling words together.
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