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Unit Plan

Creating a Classroom Economy Unit Plan

Students are actively involved in a year-long study of economics in which they maintain a class bank and store to help learn economic principles in a real-world setting.

By  Beth Newingham
  • Grades:
    Grades 3–5
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Overview

Students are actively involved in a year-long study of economics where they earn credits and debits while maintaining a class bank and store. The unit is cross-curricular: students learn major-principles concepts, as well as use math skills on a daily basis. The students' potential to earn credits and debits (incentive!) also helps teachers facilitate classroom management.

While economics is considered part of the elementary social studies curriculum, textbooks and other social studies programs often neglect to incorporate economic instruction. The classroom economy can fill this void while serving as a fun way for students to act as both consumers and economists in a real world setting.

Objective

Students will:
  1. Participate in a classroom economy designed to mimic real world economic activity
  2. Compare economic systems over time and history
  3. Evaluate the importance of classroom jobs and daily responsibilities
  4. Perform classroom jobs to earn daily salaries
  5. Budget their money and balance their "checking accounts"
  6. Use a decision making model to make consumer decisions
  7. Reflect on the importance of saving money
  8. Discover that every decision has an opportunity cost
  9. Observe consumer behavior to understand the law of demand
  10. Discover how inflation works and the effect it can have on the classroom economy
  11. Study economic trends in the classroom economy

Lesson Plans for this Unit

Lesson 1: Introducing the Classroom Economy

Lesson 2: Grand Opening

Lesson 3: Using the Class Store to Teach Economic Principles

Lesson 4: The Student Economist

Reproducibles

Credit and Debit Log
Kids Bank Online Activity

Culminating Activity

By the end of the year, students have learned diverse economic concepts while participating in an economy that mimics activity in the real world. They have become responsible and well-informed consumers who make good decisions and are familiar with typical consumer behavior.

You may decide that they are now ready to become entrepreneurs. During the last month of school, I allow students to sell goods they have created themselves. Students can choose what to make and sell in the class store. They need to determine an appropriate price based on the amount of money classmates are willing to pay. Students can also market their products by creating advertisements on poster board or even filming commercials.

Supporting Books

Books and Materials for Teaching Economic Principles

  • Part of Collection:
    Beth Newingham: Classroom Tips & Strategies
  • Everything You Need:
    Classroom Management: Everything You Need
  • Subjects:
    Money, Real-World Math, Jobs, Careers and Work, Entrepreneurship, Goods and Services, Markets and Trade, Production, Distribution, and Consumption, Responsibility, Classroom Management, Computers, Internet Activities
  • Skills:
    Online Sources
  • Duration:
    1 Year
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