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- Activity 6: Show Me the Money! A Fractional Reserve Banking Simulation
- Activity 7: The Great Depression – A Family’s Choices
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- Lesson 1: The Market for Moving People to America
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- Introduction to The Economics of Disasters
- Lesson 1 Activity: Are Disasters Good for the Economy?
- Visual #1: Economic Growth from Hurricanes Could Outweigh Costs
- Visual #2: Or “I Can Answer That Question With Only ? Clues!”
- Visual #3: What Is Seen and What Is Not Seen?
- Visual #4: The Broken Window Fallacy
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- Lesson 2: When Disaster Strikes, What Can Markets Do?
- Lesson 2 Activity: The Market for Thingamajigs – Price Gouging?
- Lesson 2 Activity: Nobody Knows Everything
- Lesson 3: When Disaster Strikes, What Can Government Do?
- Lesson 4: When Disaster Strikes, What Can We Do?
- Lesson 5: Are Disasters “A Disaster” for Lesson Planning?
- Addendum to Introduction – Catalog of Disasters
- Economics, Water Use, and the Environment
- Lesson 4: Water Law – The ‘Rules of the Game’ Matter
- Lesson 5: The Tragedy of the Commons
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- Lesson 5: The Tragedy of the Commons
- Lesson 7: The Future of Water – Crisis or Cooperation?
- Introduction to Economics, Water Use and the Environment
- Lesson 1: When Is a Basketball a Substitute for Water?
- Lesson 1: When Is a Basketball a Substitute for Water?
- Lesson 2: Waste Is in the Eye of the Beholder
- Lesson 2: Waste Is In the Eye of the Beholder
- Lesson 3: Yours, Mine, Ours: The Rules of Ownership
- Lesson 3: Yours, Mine, Ours: The Rules of Ownership
- Lesson 4: Water Law – The ‘Rules of the Game’ Matter
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- Lesson 6: Would You Swim There?
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- Lesson 7 – The Future of Water – Crisis or Cooperation?
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From the Chairman and President
We are pleased to report on the achievements of the Foundation for Teaching Economics in 2016.
The FTE is always exploring new and better methods to teach economics to more high school students and our newest program, Immersion into Economics, was a big winner in 2016. We tested this new format, 100 students for one day, with more than 350 students attending one-day programs in three locations. Feedback from the students and their teachers was so favorable that we are planning to offer many more of these 100 students – one day programs in 2017.
And, our new Immersion into Economics program is just the opener in a very positive report. In the pages that follow, you will see how the FTE is accomplishing its mission and influencing how economics is taught in our nation’s high schools. Most importantly, the FTE has been broadening its reach through strategic partnerships and cooperative programing and, in 2016, those efforts led to 722 high school teachers and 843 high school students attending FTE programs where they learned basic economic principles and about the benefits produced by free markets. Our online Annual Report has in-depth descriptions of every aspect of the FTE, including audited financial statements.
The need for the FTE’s programs has never been greater. Economic literacy among young people is so low that it is no surprise a socialist candidate for president attracted widespread support. According to the American Council of Trustees and Alumni, only 3% of colleges and universities require students to take an economics course. That is one reason among many we focus on teaching economics at the high school level.
The Foundation for Teaching Economics has been training teachers to teach high school economics for 40 years, and our comparative advantage is lesson plans that emphasize an “economic way of thinking.” The FTE’s goal is to help students understand how economic principles are applicable to everyday life. Our lessons are designed to develop critical thinking skills based on knowledge that every decision in life involves an opportunity cost, that markets are fundamentally about social cooperation, and that incentives play a decisive role in influencing behavior. The FTE makes the study of economics fun and relevant for high school students through activities-based lessons.
Based on the advice of Dr. Milton Friedman many years ago, our Economics for Leaders programs focus on educating high school students who demonstrate leadership potential as a way to impact public policy over the long term. Our programs have produced over 10,000 alumni, all of whom learned about the institutional framework necessary to foster a vibrant free enterprise system. Our partnership with The Fund for American Studies (TFAS) opens the way for FTE student alumni to take advantage of continuing education opportunities offered by TFAS at the collegiate level.
Freedom, individual responsibility, and free markets define the essence of the American political tradition, and the curriculum of every professional development program we conduct for high school teachers and every Economics for Leaders program for students is built around a core set of economic principles that support those concepts.
The FTE has been successful because its programs are based upon a solid academic foundation and because annual assessments drill down into every aspect of our programs’ weaknesses and strengths. The FTE’s 2016 Independent Evaluation, which is summarized in this report and posted on the FTE webpage, shows that our programs have an immediate impact. Participants routinely report that “Economics for Leaders changed my whole outlook on how the world works.” It’s clear that the FTE is changing lives in a most positive way.
As we enter into 2017, the FTE faces the challenge of broadening its reach at the same time we come to the end of a revenue stream from an endowment established by Jack Hume, founder of the FTE. The spend-down of the Hume endowment has been by design, but going forward the FTE will be dependent more than ever on the generosity of those who understand the importance of teaching economics in high school. As you will see in this report, the FTE is excelling in that endeavor.
We wish to thank those whose contributions make the FTE’s programs possible. We can assure you that we have a strong management team dedicated to making the most efficient use of donors’ funds. We are endeavoring to be “the best philanthropic investment you can make” in support of programs that are critical to the future of our Republic.
Respectfully reported,
Frank T. Lauinger | Roger R. Ream |
Chairman | President |