I read a story about the son of a coal miner living in the 1930's, who asked
his mother:

 

"It's so cold now, why don't we light the fire in the stove?" 

 

His mother answered: "Because we don't have coal. Your father is now
unemployed and we don't have the money to buy coal. "

 

"Mom! Why did Dad lose his job?"

 

"They've mined too much coal to keep him." 

 

Mark

 

Message: 8

Date: Tue, 01 Mar 2016 14:37:36 -0800

From: Eugene Coyle <[email protected]>

Subject: [Pen-l] A push to teach economics in grade school

To: Pen-l Pen-L <[email protected]>

Message-ID: <[email protected]>

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8

 

The WSJ features a story on teaching economics to 6th-graders.
Coincidentally, Monthly Review has a full issue just now on the battle for
public schools.

The WSJ has gotten clever in preventing a simple link to its stories for
non-subscribers so I have copied the text below.  The photos have been
omitted.

 

The comments of the Chair of the Stanford econ department on math skills do
not surprise.

 

Scarcity is stressed in the lessons.

 

 

 

> Could You Pass Sixth Grade Economics?

> Public schools are teaching more economics in the aftermath of the
financial crisis

 

 

 

Wilmington, Del. 

 

April Higgins knows even the sharpest students can get tripped up on a
complex subject.

 

?What is the basic economic problem all societies face?? Ms. Higgins asks
her class. Ava Watson, raises her hand: ?Scarcity.?

 

The class responds in unison. ?People have unlimited wants but limited
resources.?

 

Not bad for a bunch of sixth-graders.

 

Scarcity, elasticity, marginal returns are now being taught in some schools
to children as young as 10 years old. The push, educators say, was spurred
by the 2008 financial crisis and is designed to help students become more
comfortable with economics, financial planning and entrepreneurship. Catch
them young, the thinking goes, and adult activities like balancing a
checkbook or taking out a loan will be easier.

 

A number of public school districts across the country are teaching
economics units to students. Some start in kindergarten with basic concepts
of money for goods and, by fifth grade, students are learning about supply
and demand. Some, like Delaware, include an emphasis on economics as part of
the social studies curriculum. 

 

In Ms. Higgins sixth?grade social studies class, at John DickinsonHigh
School in Wilmington, Del., the immediate goal is to grasp scarcity.
Students are each assigned to a Babylonian city?state?Eshnunna, Assur, Ur
and Mari?that has limited resources. They need to trade with each other to
build shelter and transportation in the form of pint-size cardboard houses
and toothpick ships. In the end, the city?states will compare what they have
built to see how trade improved their standard of living.

 

Ms. Higgins teaches an intensive economics unit for about five weeks in 90
minute blocks, two or three times a week. The rest of the school year she
teaches history, geography and civics, but even then she puts a special
emphasis on economics.

 

As part of her training at the University of Delaware and through courses
offered by the financial advocacy group the Council for Economic Education,
Ms. Higgins learned how to teach economic theory to children. As she hands
out resources like scissors and construction paper for the Babylonian
city-state exercise, she notes that children this age love to trade.
Negotiation is fun for them.

 

She shouts, ?Go!? and students begin swirling around the room, trading paper
for glue, toothpicks for scissors. It emerges that the teacher set up the
exercise so that some city?states are rich in resources, some desperately
poor. 

 

Elizabeth Brubaker, 11 years old and from the city of Ur, is in need of
scissors and glue to build houses and ships. ?I?ll give you 10 strips of
paper for two scissors,? she tells Ava, 12 years old, from the wealthy city
Mari. Ava says that she only has one scissor to spare. Elizabeth asks about
the glue stick. An unconventional deal is struck. Ten strips of paper for
one scissor and Ur can rent the glue stick from Mari for 12 minutes.

 

?Most people go through life terrified by economics,? says B. Douglas
Bernheim, chairman of the economics department at Stanford University. ?This
is an ice breaker. It?s demystifying.? Even if students don?t remember the
particulars of a class, he says, they feel comfortable with the language of
economics and that translates into more confidence in the subject later in
life. 

 

?It?s easier to learn history later if you know economics,? says Ms.
Higgins. ?It?s also personal. It helps children make sense of their lives.
Why did we have to move? Why do we have money for this and not for that??

 

?They move beyond wanting to be a policeman or a fireman,? says Jack
Kosakowski, chief executive of Junior Achievement U.S.A., an organization
that promotes financial education. ?The world becomes much bigger. You can
talk to them about budgeting, money in and money out.?

 

Some states have put emphasis on personal finance in particular, noting that
the U.S. falls behind the OECD average on financial literacy for
15-year-olds. Seventeen states now require a personal finance course for
high school graduation, up from seven in 2007. 

 

Educators say that taking economics in high school improves saving rates
later in life. With an eye to building a more resilient workforce,
entrepreneurship classes have also become popular, many based on the
television show ?Shark Tank,? in which contestants pitch a business to
investors. Some schools discuss the benefits of capitalism over communism.
The Texas education code states that economics must be taught with an
emphasis on the free market system and its benefits. 

 

Gale Mitchell teaches an economics course to gifted seventh and
eighth-graders in Tucson, Ariz. Although she touches on the macroeconomic
concepts, she prefers to dig deep into the nuances of microeconomics.

 

?Marginal analysis is really hard for them,? she says. The assessment of the
benefits and costs of an activity can be too abstract for children. To teach
the idea, she buys a big box of doughnuts and chooses a student to eat them
in front of the class. The student is asked to discuss his level of
satisfaction with each additional doughnut.

 

?We are all watching this kid eat doughnuts, and he?s so happy in the
beginning,? says Ms. Mitchell, who makes her own textbooks because there are
so few available. ?But at some point the total utility is no longer
positive. You can see it on their face.?

 

Some educators caution that the emphasis on economics should not be done at
the expense of math. ?A lot of kids have AP economics from high school, but
I look at their math skills,? says Prof. Bernheim.

 

In Ms. Higgins? classroom, the lesson shifted to different types of economic
models. It turns out the city states of Babylon were once run as a command
economy, where production and prices of goods and peoples? incomes are
decided centrally by the government. The students concede that while the
market economy has made them wealthier, trading for the good life is
exhausting.

 

?To be honest I like the exercises that center on a command economy,? says
11-yea-?old Mairead Chase of city state Eshnunna. ?I like authority. I like
to have a goal,? she shrugs and smiles. ?Sometimes it?s nice to be told what
to do.?

 

Write to Nina Sovich at [email protected]

 

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