How to Use the Basic Economic Concepts - Common Core Lessons and Activities Work through the lessons and activities as a class to teach your students higher-order thinking, analysis, and 21st century skills necessary to meet new Common Core expectations. Allow students to work through the lessons independently to build and practice these new skills. Include technology, collaboration, presentations, and discussion in the activities as you desire - you can decide how in-depth to go. Watch your class develop new abilities to meet the rigor of Common Core State Standards, right before your eyes!
Use some of the pages - or use them all - based on your grade, your students, your curriculum, and your needs. Use these pages at their current size, or if you prefer them to be 8.5" X 11", enlarge them 125% on your copy machine. Use the correlations grid to easily see which Common Core standards are covered in each lesson.
The Basic Economic Concepts - Common Core Lessons and Activities book Reading for Information Higher-Order Thinking Writing Problems Primary Source Analysis Vocabulary Graphic Organizers Map Activities & More!
Here is the Table of Contents for the Basic Economic Concepts - Common Core Lessons and Activities Needs and Reading Informational Text G Exchange & Reading Informational Text Scarcity, Choices, & Reading Informational Text Getting in Primary Source Analysis Cost & Benefit of Graphical Analysis G Consumers & Reading Informational Text "A Double Hold-up": Primary Source Analysis Factors of Graphical Analysis G Reading Informational Text Supply and Data Analysis Economic Vocabulary G Factors Affecting Supply & Compare & Contrast GO1 Economic Cause & Effect G Adam Smith & Free Reading Informational Text Economist Summarizing Information G Economic Reading Informational Text GO2 Writing Banks, Savers, & Reading Informational Text Government & Reading informational Text G Common Core State Standards Correlations
Carole Marsh is a children's author and the founder of Gallopade International, a children’s book publishing company headquartered in Peachtree City, GA. Marsh writes mystery fiction in addition to works of non-fiction for children. Initially she self-published under the imprint Gallopade Publishing Group, which she founded in 1979; today Gallopade International is a major small publisher based in Peachtree City, Georgia.
In 2007 Marsh received the Georgia Author of the Year award for her contributions to children's literature and to the state of Georgia over the past twenty-seven years.