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Capture your students' imagination with The Little Book of Economics
Ip has included a section in most of the chapters titled "Into the Weeds." These sections are primers on economic data and terminology. Each chapter ends with "The Bottom Line," which provides a succinct recap of the main ideas. With chapter titles such as "Economic Bungee Jumping: Business Cycles, Recessions, and Depressions…Oh My!"; "All the World's an ATM: Knitting Global Markets Together"; and "The Buck Starts Here: The Federal Reserve's Amazing Power to Print and Destroy Money," Ip artfully captures the reader's imagination. Reading Ip's book will help students enhance their comprehension of basic economic concepts and appreciate the practical application of economics. Suggestions for the classroom Have students read the chapter "Labor Pains: Employment, Unemployment, and Wages."Then point them to the Atlanta Fed's Center for Human Capital Studies' new Jobs Calculator so they can see how much net employment needs to change within a specified number of months to hit a targeted unemployment rate. After students read about inflation and price changes in chapter 5 ("Fire and Ice"), they can use the Minneapolis Fed's "What Is a Dollar Worth?" to explore the Consumer Price Index (CPI) and calculate price level changes for various goods. The Dallas Fed's booklet Globalization can reinforce Ip's chapter 6 ("Drop the Puck!: The Globalization Game Is Here Whether We're Ready or Not"). For more insights into current economic news and events, direct your students to Ip's blog. By Amy Hennessy, senior economic and financial education specialist, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta March 29, 2012 |