Ergebnis der Suche

Ergebnis der Suche nach: ( (Freitext: MARKET) und (Lernressourcentyp: UNTERRICHTSPLANUNG) ) und (Bildungsebene: "SEKUNDARSTUFE I")

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  • On the Market: Thinking Critically About Advertising

    In this New York Times  lesson, students consider various forms of advertising, then keep logs of the ads and other branded content they encounter in a specified period, and reflect on their experiences with marketing (2011).

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  • History of Monopolies in the United States

    Monopolies in the United States have existed in many forms. When a business dominates a market, its market power makes it a monopoly. How these businesses use their market power will determine the legality of the monopoly. Contrary to popular belief, monopolies are not illegal in the United States. What is illegal is actions taken by monopolies to limit competition. This ...

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  • Opportunity Cost

    Students learn what opportunity cost means and that there is an opportunity cost to every consumer choice. They can identify the opportunity cost of a consumer choice (EconEd 2018).

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  • epals Classroom Exchange

    ePALS Classroom Exchange® maintains the Internet's largest community of collaborative classrooms engaged in cross-cultural exchanges, project sharing and language learning. ePALS is also the leading provider of school-safe emailTM, blogs, eMentoring and web-browsing technology for the global educational market.

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  • Monopoly

    Students will learn in this EconEd-lesson that the profit-maximization rules for the monopoly are the same as they are for a perfectly competitive firm but the monopoly will produce a smaller output than society would like it to produce (USA 2016-22).

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  • What causes economic bubbles?

    This Ted-Ed lesson explains the peak of a business cycle using the tulip market in the 1600s as an example (2015).

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  • Questioning our Throwaway Culture

    What is ʺthrowaway cultureʺ — and how do we participate in it? Students explore 'planned obsolescence' and a countering movement for the 'right-to-repair.' (USA: Teachable Moments 2022)

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  • Who Makes Your iPhone: A discussion about sweatshops

    What is the human cost of an iPad? The labor conditions at factories making Apple products have been in the public spotlight lately. While Apple is not unique in using low-wage Chinese labor to produce its electronic products, the popularity of the iPad and iPhone, along with publicity surrounding the death of Apple CEO Steve Jobs, have renewed debate about what labor ...

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  • The Streamin’ Blues

    The lesson provides insight into what makes musicians fans or opponents of digital streaming. Cost/benefit analysis and identifying incentives are the economic reasoning tools used in this lesson to understand why artists’ stance on streaming is rational, whether they give it a thumbs up or thumbs down (USA: FTE 2018).

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