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    Teach financial responsibility with Saving Our Futures

    May 8, 2009

    As the economy continues to founder, it’s a good time to help students improve their financial literacy. I’d like to think when they grow up they might handle the economy better than we have. America’s Prmoise Alliance has developed curriculum on financial responsibility, Saving Our Futures, where you’ll find lots of materials here to help educate your students on being smart with money. SOF uses simple, practical advice such as don’t buy stuff you cannot afford. It also explains credit, savings, and even gets into public policy.

    Saving Our Futures is a companion to the documentary I.O.U.S.A. If you haven’t seen it and don’t want to shell out for a DVD, the documentary website has a condensed 30-minute version. It’s pretty frightening, and would be a good introduction to these materials for your students in a scared-straight sort of way.

    Lest you think you don’t have time to teach this stuff, may I direct your attention to the epidemic of home foreclosures and lost jobs in America. Making sure students know a thing or two about money may prevent a mess like this from happening again. -BILL FERRIS

    Saving Our Futures

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    This American Life: when banks go bad

    Instructifeature: Four views of the recession…and none of them look that great

    Marketplace explains the credit crisis as an Antarctic expedition

    This American Life: when banks go bad

    March 17, 2009

    In my own geeky world of talk radio programs, This American Life adds a little bit more of a storytelling element than most programming on National Public Radio. To me, anyway, the TAL team’s stories can arguably be considered more accessible than NPR. Now it time for me to sit back and let my inbox fill up with a whole bunch of hate. But I will concede this: NPR’s Planet Money podcast has been on fire lately.

    So when Planet Money’s Alex Blumberg and Adam Davidson made this episode for This American Life, it was the best of both worlds. They do an excellent of job explaining the breakdown in banking that has occurred and the problems that banks currently face. The acting sounds a bit hammy sometimes, but I think its also hammy on purpose, as though they’re subtly being a bit derisive towards the bad borrowers and lenders.

    The Bad Bank episode is a good starting point for students who have questions about what started this whole recession mess. The best part is that Blumberg and Davidson make it understandable for people like me, who — while incredibly smart — still have difficulty getting past the language barrier of business and finance. -NICK YINGLING

    This American Life: Bad Bank

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    Instructifeature: Four views of the recession…and none of them look that great

    Marketplace explains the credit crisis as an Antarctic expedition

    Instructifeature: Four views of the recession…and none of them look that great

    March 10, 2009

    If you put two economists in a room, you get two opinions, unless one of them is Lord Keynes, in which case you get three opinions.- Winston Churchill

    These troubling times give a whole new meaning to the term dismal science, but all this despair brings lots of opportunities for teaching. Aside from the obvious moral lesson in the person of Bernie Madoff, as with most economic catastrophes, this one brings a lot of data, and in that data can be some great lessons for your kids. Here is a recent post from Flowing Data, an infographics blog. It originated at The Big Picture. While Flowing Data is suitable for students, The Big Picture is run by a Wall Street type, whose language can be blue in keeping with his milieu, so be forewarned.

    The post features four different line graphs about unemployment in this, and past, recessions. Looking at them there can be a great lesson in critical thinking. I’m going to show the graphics, and share some thoughts of my own about each at the bottom. I would NOT teach based on the notes at the bottom, but instead, see what your students can dig out of it. You may notice things of interest in this that I’ve missed, I only provide commentary to get your thinking rolling.This first one from Time Magazine shows job losses in recent recessions.

    Graph number 1 has only recent recessions on it, so it’s missing some of the context that some of the next graphs have. It is also comparing based on numbers, rather than the percentage of the population. Since it is only looking at recent recessions (1990, 2001, now), the population figures have some growth (~13% between 1990 and 2000) this can cause some problems in comparing the numbers, but we’ll see in some of the other graphs with older data, this is a big difference.

    Graph number 2 looks at percentages, and goes back to all recessions in the post-WWII era. this gives context, and by using a percentage, makes it a comparison of apples to apples (as opposed to apples to kumquats). Two things stand out — the job loss is still not as severe today as in 1940s and 50s recessions, but there is also a trend towards recent recessions lasting longer, so we may not even be at the mid-point yet.

    Graph number 3 is similar to number 2, but it looks at job loss numbers like graph number 1, and you can see how that skews things quite a bit when you compare historic data

    And finally, graph number 4 uses 100 as a baseline for peak employment, so it’s like it’s looking at percent of employment rather than percent of unemployment, but it can go above 100 because employment can be higher than it was at the peak. This was very confusing for Bill, my editor, so here is how I explained it to him:

    Let’s say you are a sales person paid on commission, and your salary is one line. Your salary hits a peak of $100,000, then drops at the recession starts. 100 is equal to your peak salary. Your salary begins to free fall for about 12 months, so that it ends up at $50,000. You would then be at 50 on a 100 point scale. Then it starts going back up, at 18 months, you’re back to $75,000 (or 75 on the scale). There is a recovery and at 24 months, you are exceeding your old salary, and you are up to $125,000 or 125 points on the scale.

    Then let’s say another line is your smarter, but less well-paid older brother. He has a PhD, but he’s an adjunct professor (lecturer) at local community college. He manages to take home $50,000 before the recession hits state education budgets. So that month his salary is 100 points. It drops rapidly too, hitting $25,000 in six months which will put him at 50 points (half his peak salary), and then drops to $10,000 which is 20 points at 12 months. Stimulus money to the state arrives just as the food stamps do for old bro, and he shoots back up to $50,000, or 100 points at 18 months, when the local university goes on a hiring spree for retraining. The lines would looks similar (with some differences) for both of you, even though the “real” dollars earned is not the same. This is good for comparing numbers that are not apples and apples, like the number of people employed in 2007 versus those in 1981, but unlike percent of employment, you can exceed 100, if your employment level goes above where it was at the start of the recession which is what you want to happen. The other graphs show something like this by showing the job losses as negative percentages, and job gains as positives. This is a sophisticated way to represent things, but can be confusing, right Bill? Let’s hope that helps us get our thinking caps on. Please let us know if this helps explain things to your students! -ALICE MERCER

    4 Different Looks at Job Losses During Recessions via FlowingData

    Related stuff:

    Marketplace explains the credit crisis as an Antarctic expedition

    Monday by the Numbers – 10/20/08

    Get some game in the Stock Market (I immediately feel less cool after saying that)

    February 24, 2009

    If there is one thing I learned from my third marriage it is this: always have a prenup. Failing that, I guess the next thing best thing is to just have so much money it doesn’t really matter. Now the question becomes, “How do I get ultra-mega rich?”

    Countless late night infomercials each make their own claims about how to reach Scrooge McDuck levels of wealth, and a semi-frequent one is that you should make your money work for you. I mean, that’s a tactic Wall Street wizards use all the time—why can’t you?

    The Stock Market Game is a great way for students to practice saving and investing skills, as well as build upon a lot of other subject-matter skills in the process. Some readers out there, like myself, remember doing this game the old fashioned way — our teacher gave us an imaginary cash amount and then our class tracked the investments using newspapers. This process was made even more difficult by the fact that this was the Dark Ages before we had computers, when pterodactyl attacks were all too common.

    Now the game is online, allowing students to look at their portfolio, enter transactions, and research stocks and mutual funds. I’d still encourage actual newspapers in the classroom — letting a kid glean just a little insight to those confusing business section pages listing all the small numbers can be pretty empowering.

    A quick note: Registration dates vary from state to state. Also, it would seem as though some spring-semester programs have already begun. By clicking through the “Registration” link, you will be able to find your local coordinator who will be able to provide you with more information about getting started. -NICK YINGLING

    The Stock Market Game

    Photo credit: azrainman on Flickr.

    Win a Nobel Prize…or at least pretend to

    February 23, 2009

    Quick! Name five famous discoveries honored by the Nobel Prize…(crickets chirping)….Um, Al Gore won one, right? Ask your students and you’ll likely get a similar response. The people at Nobelprize.org decided that they didn’t want children growing up not understanding the significant accomplishments honored by the Nobel Prize. By visiting the educational outreach section of the website, you can introduce your students to these accomplishments in a fun and engaging way, as well as teach your course content.

    The site offers several interactive activities for each category of Nobel Prize — physics, chemistry, literature, medicine, peace, and economics. There are games, readings, and simulations in each section. In my class, I’ve used the blood typing game to help students understand the differences between blood types. In the physics section, there is an interesting simulation about microscopes. By using this, you could show students what the different types of microscopes can do. There is also a microscope quiz that could be used to assess understanding. Another neat feature is the readings. In the DNA-RNA-Protein reading, for example, you can select a “Basic” or an “Advanced” text. This would be excellent for differentiating instruction.

    Lest you think this site is only good for Science, there is a section about the Nobel Prize in Literature, and a game about William Golding’s classic, Lord of the Flies. I’m kind of a science gal, so I didn’t do so hot on that game; maybe your high school English students will do better. Regardless, you will find this site useful. -REBECCAH HAINES

    Educational Games via Nobelprize.org

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    Celebrate weird science with the Ig Nobel Awards

    Darwin Day: Happy 200th birthday, Charles!

    Continue your education with Academic Earth

    February 19, 2009

    aca.pngEveryone would agree that learning is important. If we didn’t, none of us would be doing what we do. But are we practicing what we preach to our students? Are we, as educators, continuing our education in the same way we urge our students to do every day? In the past, unless you were willing to shell out thousands and thousands of dollars for additional schooling, continuing education was tough to come by. Not anymore.

    Academic Earth is an organization founded with the goal of giving everyone on earth access to a world-class education. In conjunction with top-level universities such as MIT and Princeton, Academic Earth brings the best content together in one place and creates an environment where that content is remarkably easy to use.

    There are thousands of lectures currently available from the world’s top scholars. You may already be familiar with the MIT Open Courseware project or the Open Yale courses, which make thousands and thousands of lectures and courses available online for free. Academic Earth includes these resources but has added lectures from Berkeley, Harvard, Princeton and Stanford.

    Currently, 17 subjects are represented ranging from Astronomy to Religion. All subjects include individual lectures, but many of them also offer entire courses. For example, if you’re interested in Computer Science, you can view all 32 lectures in Introduction to Computer Science I by David J. Malan at Harvard — for free. All of the videos at AE can be shared to a Facebook page, emailed, or embedded into a blog or wiki. Academic Earth also gives users the ability to create your own custom play list to make future visits a tad easier.

    So the next time you’ve got the urge to learn a little about “The Fourier Transform and its applications” or “Convex Optimization,” Academic Earth is the place to go. – JERRY SWIATEK

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    Marketplace explains the credit crisis as an Antarctic expedition

    October 23, 2008

    Like most catastrophes, America’s financial crisis has created such a mess, it’s tough to make sense of the problem. Paddy Hirsch, senior editor of American Public Media’s Marketplace radio program, explains the situation in an easy-to-understand format by looking at The credit crisis as Antarctic expedition.

    In this video, Hirsch explains that a group of intrepid Antarctic explorers (banks) are so weighed down by ruck sacks full of bad investments, they can no longer leap over cracks in the ice, and each bank that falls through risks pulling the others down with it. Also, likening a bank failure to an icy grave underscores the seriousness of the situation.

    The video is a great primer for students trying to grasp how the credit crisis got so bad. Like a real Antarctic expedition, the credit crisis is fraught with peril. Let’s just hope we all don’t get left out in the cold. -BILL FERRIS

    The credit crisis as Antarctic expedition via Lifehacker

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    Monday by the Numbers – 10/20/08

    Keep track of elections with Gallup

    October 2, 2008

    I’m sure you’ve heard the results of various Gallup polls throughout this election season. Rather than waiting for the nightly newscast to mention what the pollsters say, you can keep track yourself by going straight to the source. Gallup.com has the latest results, updated daily. Further, you can see the results from a seemingly infinite number of demographics, such as candidate support by race, gender, church affiliation, education, age, and many more.

    Gallup records people’s opinions on pretty much every topic, from baseball to economics to Russia. So once the election is over, there are plenty more statistics available for your classroom use.

    How can you use this information in class? Have your students follow along or chart the results. When one candidate’s numbers rise or dip, you could ask them their opinion on why the flux occurred. Or have them propose solutions to America’s falling consumer confidence. You can do a lot with this kind of data at your disposal. Now is a great time to put it to use. -BILL FERRIS

    Gallup

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    The candidates answer tough questions about science at Sciencedebate 2008

    Cut through political spin with PolitiFact

    Social Networking and Social Studies Collide with iCue

    Make Sure Your Students are Ready to Vote This Election

    In Motion: The African American Migration Experience

    September 19, 2008

    What do the Middle Passage, the post-Civil War movement of rural African Americans to the north, and Caribbean immigration have in common?  All of these events involved the migration of people of African descent to, within, or from what is now the United States.  These and other migrations are the focus of In Motion: The African American Migration Experience, a project of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture at the New York Public Library.  This unique resource brings scholarly research and primary sources on many different migrations together, creating exciting possibilities for student research on both individual topics and comparative themes.

    Each section of the website includes a detailed historical overview of a specific migration, interspersed with primary sources that the reader can explore in detail.  For example, in the section entitled Runaway Journeys, you will find paintings, engravings and photographs of enslaved people, interviews with former slaves, maps, newspaper advertisements for runaways, photographs of the shackles and collars used to restrain slaves, letters, personal narratives of escape, writings from slave holders, secondary accounts from historians, and much more.  In all, the website brings together more than 16,500 pages of text and 8,300 illustrations to create an incredibly rich archive for historical research.

    The Educational Materials section provides lesson plans for using these resources that go well beyond history and into other curriculum areas, including economics, mathematics, language arts, performing arts, and world religions.  For example, students can use documents from the Great Migration to study wages and expenses in 1919 in an economics lesson plan, focus on the arts of the Harlem Renaissance while learning about the Second Great Migration, or explore the Constitution in detail while studying the slave trade.

    Taught well, history is always a comparative endeavor — we want our students to understand how the past differs from the present, and also how different moments in the past relate to one another.  In Motion beings together an incredible collection of tools that students can use to figure out the connections between migrations and to develop their own interpretations of African American history. -KATHRYN WALBERT

    In Motion: The African American Migration Experience

    Related Stuff:

    Drop Me Off in Harlem: Learn how people and culture intersected in the Harlem Renaissance

    Learn about the lives of runaway slaves with The Geography of Slavery

    Stock up on history resources at the National History Education Clearninghouse

    Monday by the Numbers

    June 9, 2008

    Numbers on Flickr - Photo Sharing!50 Things Everyone Should Know How To Do – Do you know how to build a fire? How about CPR, do you know it? Or give directions? All of these things are essential life skills that you should know if you don’t already. This list from Marc and Angel covers everything from swimming to changing a tire in order for you to be more self-reliant.

    6 Things Money Cannot Help You Achieve – Even Bill Gates and Steve Jobs still have to deal with the same time that you and I do, even if they could buy and sell you and me in a heartbeat. Surely there are other things than the ones presented on this list by Dumb Little Man, but these 6 make good sense. Money can’t buy you self-esteem, unfortunately, nor will it buy happiness.

    52 Character Building Thoughts for Children – These might not be great tips for your older students, but the elementary crowd could really benefit from them. Leah Davies, M. Ed. brings us these great quotes on KellyBear.com. There are some real gems here, like this: When I am sad, I help myself feel better by thinking of things that are good in my life.

    9 Ways to Save At The Movies – I know this isn’t completely related to teaching, but since school is out for most of us, we might have some more free time on our hands. Unfortunately, free time allows you to spend more money. If you plan to see any of the awesome, or not awesome movies this summer, here are some ways you can save from The Consumerist. My favorite on the list: Be careful with the concessions. -JEREMY S. GRIFFIN

    (photo by Jo Jakeman on Flickr)

    Social Networking and Social Studies Collide with iCue

    May 16, 2008

    You’ve heard a lot about this “social networking” stuff kids are talking about. Whether you’re a complete networking newbie or you’ve got a MySpace, Facebook and Twitter account, make sure to check out iCue, a site from NBC News that combines peer connection with learning and multimedia.

    iCue is an online learning environment that will let your students collaborate online while learning. While it does have fun stuff like games, iCue’s coolest features are the Cue Cards, which play video clips, as well as view images, documents, and video transcripts, related to the subject you’re looking up. Like an online baseball card, “flip” the Cue Card over to read useful info about the person speaking, his or her political views, the source of the video clip, earned run average, and lots more. Each card is tagged with notes and keywords, and if NBC’s notes don’t cut it, you can write in your own. Also like baseball cards, you can save and share them, so you can finally get hold of the Barack Obama rookie card.

    Once they’re in iCue, students can build their friends network, interact with peers through discussion forums, and comment on others’ Cue Cards or ideas. iCue forums also have a “Thought Starter” which you can use to spark student discussion about an event in the news.

    For its debut, iCue features content focused on politics, since there’s apparently a presidential election coming up. Over the summer they’ll add resources for courses including US History and English language and composition. Who knows? Once your students get started on iCue, discussing political candidates and collaborating on history research may just take precedence over updating their MySpace pages. -BILL FERRIS

    iCue

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    Make Sure Your Students are Ready to Vote This Election
    Instructifeature: An Educator’s Field Guide for Facebook

    Carnival of Education #171: Career Fair

    May 14, 2008

    ou_ags on flickrWelcome to the Carnival of Education Career Fair! We’ve retracted the bleachers and set up the booths on the gymnasium floor so these brave teachers can see what they might be doing if they weren’t teaching (perish the thought).

    Motivational Speaker
    Mr. D at I Want to Teach Forever agreed to sport a freaking mohawk as long as his students worked hard, which was about three weeks. Sadly, his motivational experiment has concluded. Long live the mohawk.

    Camp Counselor
    As a kid, my wife got to go to Space Camp and Marine Science Camp. Had Tisha Kulak and American Consumer News been around back then to point out how to save money on tuition to summer research camps, I might’ve been able to go, too.

    Productivity Consultant
    Instructify-favorite studenthacks.org has some great tips for students who want to learn how to write a research paper.

    Pro Athletes
    The Jose Vilson uses Derek Jeter as an example of how nurturing students’ talent and leadership ability early on can reap great results.

    And over at Jay P. Greene’s Blog, the author talks about the importance of identifying students’ talents, whether they’re a left tackle or potential honor student.

    Economist
    ESL teacher Larry Ferlazzo knows that money is the international language.

    Translator
    Melissa B. at The Scholastic Scribe provides a handy-dandy English-to-Eduspeak dictionary.

    Director
    Mathew Needleman at Creating Lifelong Learners takes a proactive approach to managing disruptive students during a class movie project.

    Advice Columnist
    Let’s Play Math! has some advice on teaching math to a struggling student.

    Detective
    OverwhelmedMom gets to the bottom of problems that gifted students face.

    Investigative Reporters
    The proprietor of a voice from the middle knows the means to discovery is asking the right questions.

    In addition, eduwonkette responds to a Wall Street Journal article about the criteria used to evaluate teachers.

    Game Developer
    Alvaro at SharpBrains shares a few games to stimulate your temporal lobe.

    Diplomat
    Coach Brown tries to reach an understanding with hostile parents.

    Nutritionists
    At Homework. Dinner. Life. Angela points out that good nutrition habits ought to be maintained year-round, not just a few days before the test.

    Meanwhile, Chanman at Buckhorn Road says all that caffeine students drink can’t be good for them.

    Cartographer
    Dan Callahan, a.k.a. geek.teacher, harnesses Google Maps for a lesson in community mapping.

    Librarian
    @EDU takes the work out of student research by pointing them toward Google Alerts.

    Politician
    Jane Artabasy at Golden Apple Teaching Excellence Network unloads the loaded word of the day, “elitism,” showing it’s nothing to be frightened of - especially in schools.

    The folks at Golden Apple also mull over the differences in races and learning styles.

    Astronaut
    HowDoWhy asks, what is a solar system, anyway? Furthermore, just how big is ours?

    Human Resources Specialist
    Over at Right on the Left Coast, Darren discusses the sticky situation of a teacher dating an 18-year-old student at a different school.

    Mentors
    Allison Jones at Entry Level Living wants to revamp the way young people think about leadership.

    The folks at the Efficient Leadership Files have some ideas on that as well.

    Statistician
    Lead from the Start crunches the numbers about the disconnect between teachers and EdSector.

    Strategist
    Seth Pearce at NYC Students Blog has an intriguing idea on how to overcome schools’ non-stop test preparation.

    Lobbyist
    PZ Meyers at Pharyngula has some news about a disturbing bill in the Oklahoma legislature regarding religion in schools.

    Road Grader
    As the great homework debate rages on, Shabam School makes a good case for grading homework.

    Kindergarten Teacher (sorry, I couldn’t come up with anything else)
    Kiri at Elbows, Knees, Dreams shares her thoughts (and asks for others’ opinions) about early entrance to Kindergarten.

    Photo credit: ou_ags on flickr

    Students Can Win a $500 Savings Bond in Financial Literacy Poster Contest

    February 15, 2008

    If you want kids to learn to manage their money, perhaps you should give them a little financial incentive. That’s what the National Foundation for Credit Counseling is doing. They’re sponsoring a poster contest based on the theme, “Financial Responsibility Begins with Me.” The winner gets a $500 U.S. savings bond, plus a free trip to Washington, D.C.

    The contest has three divisions – elementary, middle and high schools – so your third graders won’t be up against a senior graphic designer. It’s good fun, plus a great excuse to integrate lessons on economics, finances and budgeting.

    The deadline is in early March, so they’d best get started. And if one of your students wins, just remember where you heard about the contest. -BILL FERRIS

    Be Money Wise National Poster Contest

    Financial responsibility? What is that, exactly? via From Fay to Z