WebQuest - What Is Poverty and Who Are the Poor?

Activity Options

Click to download. Download activity (Microsoft Word)

Activity Sections

This activity is a supplement to Lesson 1.

Content Standards

National Voluntary Content Standards in Economics
Standard 13:  Income for most people is determined by the market value of the productive resources they sell.  What workers earn depends, primarily, on the market value of what they produce and how productive they are.

Standard 15:  Investment in factories, machinery, new technology, and the health, education, and training of people can raise future standards of living.

National Education Technology Standards

 

Lesson Overview

A guided web search, or "webquest," introduces students to a variety of easily accessible data about poverty. The search activity performs double-duty in exposing students to the nature and magnitude of world poverty and in confronting them with different types and quality of internet resources.

Materials:

Time: 1 ½ - 4 class periods (depending on whether homework is assigned)

Procedures:

 

OR: After hanging the visuals on the wall, conduct a silent "gallery walk." After the gallery walk create a panel composed of a spokesperson from each group. Allow remaining students to address comments and questions to the panel, and charge the panel with arriving at a working definition of world poverty for future class discussion.
Suggested Debriefing / Large group discussion questions:

Additional background note for debriefingUnequal distribution of wealth is an issue both among world nations and within individual economies, from the richest to the poorest. Students are often struck by the data showing that the largest gap between the GDP per capita of the “rich” and “poor” is found in the wealthiest countries.  Two important reminders can help students to put this fact in perspective: First, use student groups’ webquest data to emphasize that the poor in the wealthiest countries are rich relative to the poor – and indeed, the middle classes – in the developing world.  Second, use the quintile comparison data in the outline for Lesson 1, Part I, to explain  that the percent of the population identified as poor varies relatively little among nations, and does not seem to be related to the type of government or the relative wealth or poverty of the nation. In rich and poor nations alike, those at the bottom 1/10th of the income distribution, typically receive between 2 and 3 percent of national income.

          Reflection

Write a page about what you learned on your webquest.  Reflect on: