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Students will understand the following:
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For this lesson, you will need:
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| Profit or Loss Brain Booster |
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Limit the activity to showing students that the bank charges borrowers more than it pays lenders. Explain why. Do not introduce the concept of percentage. |
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You may evaluate your students' responses using the following three-point rubric:
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Interviewing Bank Customers Ask students to interview their parents or other adults and report back to the class on how their parents or other adults decide which bank(s) to use and why. Paper and Coins from around the World Bring to class examples of paper money and coins of various denominations from foreign countries. Help students make a chart that includes the name of each currency and what each currency is worth in American dollars or cents. |
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The Go-Around Dollar B. Adams, 1992. Every Kid's Guide to Making and Managing Money J. Berry, 1991. |
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What's New About Your Money Visit the U.S. Treasury and find out what changes are being made to U.S. currency to help guard against counterfeiting. The United States Mint Visit this Department of Treasury and the U.S. Mint website to find out more about the Mint. Links to information on its history, the production of a coin, and circulating coins are also included. Ben & Jerry's Home Page For your students who are interested in learning more about Ben and Jerry's ice cream business, have them visit the Ben & Jerry's home page. Here students will find more information on the company, scoop shop lists and the "flavor graveyard." |
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Click on any of the vocabulary words below to hear them pronounced and used in a sentence.
Context: At the Tokyo fish market, restaurant wholesalers purchase fish at an auction.
Context: The darker the wampum, the more valuable it was in trade.
Context: At the store, purchases can be made with any denomination of coins, as long at they add up to the right amount.
Context: A die is put into the coin press to stamp the design on a coin.
Context: Engravers create intricate portraits, signatures, and numbers so that it's as difficult as possible to counterfeit money.
Context: Banks make money by charging interest on all loans.
Context: Tellers help with bank transactions, such as making a deposit or withdrawal.
Context: Tellers help with bank transactions, such as making deposits or withdrawals.
Context: By law, every bank in the country must keep some of its money on reserve. |
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This lesson plan may be used to address the academic standards listed below. These standards are drawn from Content Knowledge: A Compendium of Standards and Benchmarks for K-12 Education: 2nd Edition and have been provided courtesy of theMid-continent Research for Education and Learningin Aurora, Colorado. Grade level: 3-5 Subject area: economics Standard: Understands basic features of market structures and exchanges. Benchmarks: Understands that money reduces the problems barter faces because money is easy to divide, carry, and store. Knows that competitive markets are those with many buyers and sellers, where no one person or firm controls prices or the number of products for sale.
Knows that banks play a key role in providing currency and other forms of money to consumers, and that banks serve as intermediaries between savers and borrowers. |
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