Friday, November 30, 2012

Money Lesson ELA Writing: Inflation Focus

Today we are are to readdress The Gift of the Magi.  We are looking at it again through the eyes of inflation in prices of items and costs of services (bills).  Here is the agenda:
  1. Watch Common Craft video on banking and compound interest (objective: obtain definitions for vocabulary such as interest, loan, etc)
  2. Brain Pop Video on Banking (see link below)
  3. Look at the story The Gift of the Magi  and extract any time a cost is mentioned.  Place those items/bills on the center column in the grid and the cost of each on the left column. (see template below and create on own sheet of paper)
  4. Use the inflation calculator to see what the cost of those same items/bills would be nowadays.
  5. Read the following interesting facts related to inflation and money for the 1900s:
Inflation
  • From 1940 to 1946, the average income in America doubled. During 1940, the average worker was paid less than $600 a year. In 1946 the same worker got $1,200 a year.
  • In 1919 the average income in America was around $650 per year.
  • In the 1920s you could buy a brand new car for less than $300.
  • In 1931 a new Chevrolet cost $623. Between 1968 and 1978 the price of new cars went up drastically. Cars cost twice as much in 1978 as they did in 1968.
  • Shopping was fun in 1900. Women could buy a pair of shoes for just $1!
5.  REMEMBER: add any new facts you learned to the "saving" circle map you began in Ms. Hunt's ELA Lit class

6.  Answer the True/False Questions on the BrainPop Banking video.
7. Ticket Out The Door: Write a short response to the following writing prompt in pbsworks:

As a general rule, prices rise over time.  This is called inflation. How does inflation explain why banks charge interest on loans?


  Inflation Calculator

Banking BrainPop

Monday, November 26, 2012

Lego Article and a Guest Speaker for Linear Systems!!

Under Parent Resources in the Learning Resources Binder there is an article on the benefits of Lego education in instruction and a comic book on banking.  This comic book is called A Penny Saved and is from the Federal Reserve.  It is about the importance of saving.  We will be reading this comic book in ELA classes as well as doing a math activity incorporating the learning objectives of solving systems of equations.  A certified financial advisor from AXA Inc. will be a guest speaker next week!  Please read the comic book in the livebinder under Parent Resources/Banking.  Here is the link again:

Learning Resources LiveBinder

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

mediaCONNECT

This is a great resources for students to use when trying to find videos and sound files for a presentation.  It is located in the LIVEBINDER titled Learning Resources under Student Resource subtab.

Monday, November 12, 2012

Learning Resources Available for Students and Parents

Click here http://www.livebinders.com/edit/index/657849  for different ideas to use for presenting information with video, finding images, researching with an approved site, finding a helpful graphic orgazizer, or playing some fun math games for review!!