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CEE Report – Fall 2014

By kwilliams

download cee report fa14 CEE Report   Fall 2014

Three times a year the Council for Economic Education releases the CEE Report, highlighting our new and noteworthy events, programs and partnerships, including pilot programs and joint ventures with key supporters.

In This Issue

Note from Nan
CEE 2014 Survey of the States and OECD’s PISA Results in The Headlines
Florida First to Adopt National Financial Education Standards
CEE’s Young Executive Council
2014 Visionary Awards Dinner
Vantage Point: Real World Perspectives on the Economy

The post CEE Report – Fall 2014 appeared first on Council for Economic Education.

POSTED: September 19, 2014 | BY: brendan

Financial education a priority in Iowa

By kwilliams

Financial education a priority in Iowa 300x141 Financial education a priority in Iowa

Dive Brief:

  • Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad is considering recommendations made by a team reviewing the state’s current financial literacy courses.
  • One suggestion was updating the state’s current standards so that the financial literacy benchmarks would be clearer and more appropriate for measuring mastery. Until these revisions are made, educators will continue having flexibility in how financial literacy is taught.
  • Iowa is one of only a handful of states that require financial literacy courses.

Dive Insight:

According to the Council for Economic Education, while all 50 states and the District of Columbia include economics in their K–12 standards, less than half make economics a required course for graduation. More specifically, only 17 require students to take personal finance courses. While educators spend a lot of energy on STEM courses and other technologies of the future, it would seem equally important to discuss money with students. Not only is money management a necessary adult skill, but poverty can contribute greatly to achievement levels. Schools have an opportunity to teach skills that students may not be receiving at home, but could make a massive difference in curbing generational monetary mismanagement.

As Branstad explained, “Financial skills are essential. Which is why they are included in Iowa’s academic standards. We know our children need to be financially literate in order to have a bright and successful future.”

Recommended Reading

The Miami Herald : Iowa officials seek to improve financial teaching

The post Financial education a priority in Iowa appeared first on Council for Economic Education.

POSTED: September 18, 2014 | BY: brendan

CEE in the News: PISA Results Spark Media Dialogue

By kwilliams

PISA 2012 Results CEE in the News: PISA Results Spark Media Dialogue

This summer, the OECD released the results of the Program for International Student Assessment (PISA) exam in financial literacy, administered to 15-year-olds in 18 countries including the US. As we previously reported in CEE In The News: US Teens Fall Behind in International Financial Literacy Exam, the results were somewhat underwhelming, with American students placing in the middle of the pack. But encouragingly, the data has sparked an ongoing dialogue in the media, and continues to promote a national conversation.

Many of these articles have cited the Council for Economic Education’s Survey of the States in support of financial literacy; here are a few of the highlights:

The post CEE in the News: PISA Results Spark Media Dialogue appeared first on Council for Economic Education.

POSTED: September 16, 2014 | BY: brendan

Teaching Opportunity – September 2014

By kwilliams

download teaching opportunity june 2014 Teaching Opportunity   September 2014

In This Issue:

  • Choose from 100+ Tactic-Rich Economics & Personal Finance Sessions
  • HS Economics Webinar Available On Demand
  • Enhance Your Students’ Gen i Revolution Experience
  • This Day in Economic History
  • Teaching the News


Choose from 100+ Tactic-Rich Economics & Personal Finance Sessions

Attendance at the 53rd Annual Financial Literacy and Economic Education Conference, October 8–11 in Dallas, Texas, is an outstanding value at just $150 for 3 days of exceptional content and invaluable connections.

Register TodaySpecial Room Rates are available through September 22.


HS Economics Webinar Available On Demand

high school economics book cover Teaching Opportunity   September 2014If you missed last week’s HS Economics Webinar, it’s available on demand!

High School Economics, CEE’s new teacher resource, contains 28 field-tested lessons aligned to national and state standards, designed with an active learning approach. The webinar’s presenter, Brett Burkey, one of the authors, provided participants with highlights and key features including:

  • How to enhance lessons using technology
  • Improvements made to this edition
  • Highlights of the new macro content

If you are teaching High School economics in grades 9–12, this webinar is for you.

HS Economics is available for purchase. You can use your myEconEdLink discount code to save 20%. Not a myEconEdLink.org subscriber? Sign up here.


Enhance Your Students’ Gen i Revolution Experience

gen i revolution webinars Teaching Opportunity   September 2014Gen i Revolution mini games, Murktide Invasion and Beyond the Mission, are available for online, tablet and Facebook play. And they are FREE.

Murktide Invasion is a role-play strategy game where students battle the Murktide for regional control by correctly answering financial questions.

Beyond the Mission is a turn-based strategy game in a comic book-style format tied to personal finance and a series of decision points.

Companion resource, Learning, Earning, and Investing for a New Generation is available for purchase. You can use your myEconEdLink discount code to save 20%. Not a myEconEdLink.org subscriber? Sign up here.


This Day in Economic History

This Day in Economic History Teaching Opportunity   September 2014Looking to use historical news items to connect economic and personal finance lessons in your classroom? EconEdLink.org’s This Day in Economic History can help.

Check out September including:

  • Speedy Electric Car Hits The Track, September 6, 1900
  • Union Leaders Get Their “Labor Day”, September 5, 1882
  • Recording Industry Strikes Back Against Illegal Online Music, September 8, 2003

Teaching the News

Teaching the News Teaching Opportunity   September 2014Use current events to teach underlying economics and personal finance concepts in your classroom. CEE’s Teaching the News identifies relevant news items and provides several related resources from EconEdLink.org to create an active-learning environment.

Recently published news items include:

  • 4 Currency ETFs To Watch Right Now – Investopedia
  • From Corporate To Entrepreneur: What Made Ryan Palmer Start A Luxury Sock – ForbesHow
  • Entrepreneurs Can Prepare for a Higher Minimum Wage – Entrepreneur

The post Teaching Opportunity – September 2014 appeared first on Council for Economic Education.

POSTED: September 4, 2014 | BY: brendan

CEE Honors New York Metro Area’s Top Economics Educators with 2014 Alfred P. Sloan Teaching Champion Awards

By kwilliams

NEW YORK, NY September 3, 2014 – This month, the Council for Economic Education (CEE) is delighted to announce the winners of the 2nd annual Alfred P. Sloan Teaching Champion Awards, honoring three outstanding economics educators in the New York metropolitan area. Demonstrating innovative teaching methods, lesson plans and learning strategies, these teachers are raising the bar for economic education in the New York metropolitan area, and will receive the Sloan Award at CEE’s annual Visionary Awards gala on October 30.

Kathleen O’Hagan, a 4th-grade teacher at P.S. 97/The Highlawn School in Brooklyn, developed a passion for teaching economics after attending CEE’s professional development workshops. She implemented a classroom mini-economy in her fourth and fifth grade classrooms where kids pay rent, apply for jobs, receive bonuses, purchase insurance, manufacture items for the classroom store, and learn how to live within a budget. She is constantly seeking ways to infuse economics and personal finance lessons into the elementary school curriculum: organizing debates on economic issues, using a play to teach students about the Industrial Revolution, and teaching kids about production by using a 3-D printer.

Darren Gurney teaches his high schoolers at New Rochelle High School in New Rochelle, NY about incentives, inflation, business formation, consequences of debt, and other microeconomic concepts using a monetary system he created called the “Gurney Greenback Exchange.” His students can earn Greenbacks in a variety of ways—by helping others, contributing to class discussion, even starting an in-class business—and can use them to purchase anything from seating privileges to meals from participating local restaurants. Darren is also the founder and advisor of the New Rochelle High School Economics Team, an after-school team that began competing in CEE’s National Economics Challenge in 2008. Students on this team also compete in the Stock Market Challenge and the CKSF Financial Literacy Challenge.

Amanda Tombari, also a 12th grade teacher at Clarkstown South High School in West Nyack, NY, cites “keeping it real” as her primary strategy for engaging students, relating economic content to their own lives. She has taken a particular interest in working with special needs students and has encouraged them to take her general Economics course. Working alongside a Special Education teacher, she modifies the assignments and incorporates different strategies to help them learn basic economic concepts such as cost-benefit analysis. Her students also learn about important economic concepts by developing a product to be sold for charity, tasking them with the responsibility of finding a producer, marketing the item and determining a price strategy.

Selected by an expert panel of judges this year’s winners stood out for their creativity and ability to effectively engage students. The honorees will each receive a $5,000 prize, and their school will receive a cash award of $2,500 to support economic and financial education. What’s more, they will also be offered the opportunity to share best practices with their colleagues by co-facilitating a training workshop for area teachers and sharing their best lessons with teachers nationwide through CEE’s online assets.

“We applaud these outstanding teachers for their innovation and dedication to making economic concepts come alive for their students,” said Nan J. Morrison, CEE President and CEO. “We hope that by bringing awareness to their achievements, these educators will serve as inspiration for their fellow teachers to bring economics and financial literacy to every classroom.”

About the Council for Economic Education

The Council for Economic Education (CEE) is the leading organization in the United States that focuses on the economic and financial education of students from kindergarten through high school—and we have been doing so for 65 years. CEE delivers the fourth “R”—a real-world understanding of how to build fruitful lives—to America’s young people. Our goal is to reach and teach every child to create a more informed citizenry capable of making better decisions as savers, investors, borrowers, voters and participants in the global economy. We do this by educating the educators: providing the curriculum tools, the pedagogical support, and the community of peers that instruct, inspire, and guide. All resources and programs are developed by educators, and delivered by our national network of affiliates—over 240 across the country. Last year, we trained more than 55,000 teachers; those teachers, in turn, we estimate, reached 5 million students.

For more information visit our website, www.councilforeconed.org
And our Facebook page, www.facebook.com/councilforeconed
Follow us on Twitter @council4econed

About the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation

The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation is a philanthropic, not-for-profit grantmaking institution based in New York City. Established in 1934 by Alfred Pritchard Sloan Jr., then-President and Chief Executive Officer of General Motors, the Foundation makes grants in support of original research and education in science, technology, engineering, mathematics and economic performance. The Alfred P. Sloan Teaching Champion Awards are funded through the Foundation’s Civic Initiatives program, which aims to benefit the New York City metropolitan area in ways that advance the Foundation’s mission. www.sloan.org.

The post CEE Honors New York Metro Area’s Top Economics Educators with 2014 Alfred P. Sloan Teaching Champion Awards appeared first on Council for Economic Education.

POSTED: September 3, 2014 | BY: brendan

Lisa Bender from Southern Garret High School on Having a Digital Classroom

By GeorgiAnna Carbone-Wynne

CEE’s Blog Series on Teaching Techniques delivers teaching ‘best practices’ from practitioners in the field. These K-12 teachers from all over the United States present their proven tactics and techniques that keep their students interested and engaged in learning economics and personal finance concepts and lessons. Part 8 of 8.

Lisa Bender from Southern Garret High School in Oakland, Maryland, has spent her career teaching economics fusing it with her other passion, immersive technology for the classroom. For her, economics lessons come alive when they are paired with the ground breaking information found on web portals and discovered with easy to use platforms such as tablets. With these tools, Ms. Bender is able to teach complementary lessons on economics and digital citizenship by showing students what tools to use and how to use them responsibly.

This completes CEE’s new Blog Series, Teaching Techniques: Classroom Innovation on Economic Education. Keep checking back for more weekly updates on our blog!

The post Lisa Bender from Southern Garret High School on Having a Digital Classroom appeared first on Council for Economic Education.

POSTED: August 27, 2014 | BY: brendan

Teachers on Financial Fitness for Life

By kwilliams

Tried and tested, Financial Fitness for Life® (FFFL) is the ideal personal finance curriculum for all teachers.

Stacia Reeves from Rincon High School in Arizona says, “Students don’t realize they’re incorporating economics when they are doing these activities, but they’re all jazzed when they come back the next day and realize something they did in their life was applicable to something that we did in the classroom.” With user generated course content, FFFL‘s comprehensive lesson plans guides teachers through the course, making it easy to follow, especially for those that may not be well-versed in teaching economics.

What makes FFFL perfect for students is how applicable each lesson is. CEE has made each lesson a preparation for life beyond the classroom, measuring the learning by four themes of personal finance: earning an income, saving, spending and credit, and money management. Even with these four comprehensive themes that align to the Common Core State Standards, students and teachers have still found the lessons engaging. Lynda Motriam from Old Mill High School attests to the originality of the student and teacher guides, saying “FFFL gives you a chance to teach financial concepts in a very inventive way. That’s one of the things that is consistent with CEE materials…they put a fresh spin on it.”

The streamlined lesson content, updated information, and fresh online resources on these new lessons keeps K-12 students excited about learning personal finance skills in and out of the classroom while keeping teachers ready too. Make sure to check out what these fantastic teachers have to say after using the Financial Fitness for Life® textbook series in their own K–12 classrooms.

The post Teachers on Financial Fitness for Life appeared first on Council for Economic Education.

POSTED: August 26, 2014 | BY: brendan

Mary Neely from Orchard Grove Elementary on Combining Music and Economics

By GeorgiAnna Carbone-Wynne

CEE’s Blog Series on Teaching Techniques delivers teaching ‘best practices’ from practitioners in the field. These K-12 teachers from all over the United States present their proven tactics and techniques that keep their students interested and engaged in learning economics and personal finance concepts and lessons. Part 7 of 8.

Mary Neely from Orchard Grove Elementary in Frederick, Maryland, incorporated singing into her classroom help her students to grasp economics concepts. By serving as an example of combining music and economics, Ms. Neely inspired students (singers and non-singers alike) to create their own individual pieces of music, using concepts they learned and implementing them their own way, proving that they understood what was taught.

Stay tuned for the next edition of CEE’s new Blog Series, Teaching Techniques: Classroom Innovation on Economic Education on August 27th, 2014.

The post Mary Neely from Orchard Grove Elementary on Combining Music and Economics appeared first on Council for Economic Education.

POSTED: August 20, 2014 | BY: brendan

CEE in the News: NBC’s Back-to-School Money Lessons Cite Survey of the States

By Annamarie Cerreta

Sharon Epperson CEE in the News: NBCs Back to School Money Lessons Cite Survey of the States

In NBC’s Today Online, reporter Sharon Epperson shares some great tips for teaching your kids about money just in time for the new school year — plus a great shout-out to CEE, citing the Survey of the States! Click here to read the full article.

The post CEE in the News: NBC’s Back-to-School Money Lessons Cite Survey of the States appeared first on Council for Economic Education.

POSTED: August 18, 2014 | BY: brendan

CEE Honors New York Metro Area’s Top Economics Educators with 2014 Alfred P. Sloan Teaching Champion Awards

By kwilliams

NEW YORK, August 13, 2014 – This month, the Council for Economic Education (CEE) is delighted to announce the winners of the 2nd annual Alfred P. Sloan Teaching Champion Awards, honoring three outstanding economics educators in the New York metropolitan area. Demonstrating innovative teaching methods, lesson plans and learning strategies, these teachers are raising the bar for economic education in the New York metropolitan area, and will receive the Sloan Award at CEE’s annual Visionary Awards gala on October 30.

Kathleen O’Hagan, a 4th-grade teacher at P.S. 97/The Highlawn School in Brooklyn, developed a passion for teaching economics after attending CEE’s professional development workshops. She implemented a classroom mini-economy in her fourth and fifth grade classrooms where kids pay rent, apply for jobs, receive bonuses, purchase insurance, manufacture items for the classroom store, and learn how to live within a budget. She is constantly seeking ways to infuse economics and personal finance lessons into the elementary school curriculum: organizing debates on economic issues, using a play to teach students about the Industrial Revolution, and teaching kids about production by using a 3-D printer.

Darren Gurney teaches his high schoolers at New Rochelle High School in New Rochelle, NY about incentives, inflation, business formation, consequences of debt, and other microeconomic concepts using a monetary system he created called the “Gurney Greenback Exchange.” His students can earn Greenbacks in a variety of ways—by helping others, contributing to class discussion, even starting an in-class business—and can use them to purchase anything from seating privileges to meals from participating local restaurants. Darren is also the founder and advisor of the New Rochelle High School Economics Team, an after-school team that began competing in CEE’s National Economics Challenge in 2008. Students on this team also compete in the Stock Market Challenge and the CKSF Financial Literacy Challenge.

Amanda Tombari, also a 12th grade teacher at Clarkstown South High School in West Nyack, NY, cites “keeping it real” as her primary strategy for engaging students, relating economic content to their own lives. She has taken a particular interest in working with special needs students and has encouraged them to take her general Economics course. Working alongside a Special Education teacher, she modifies the assignments and incorporates different strategies to help them learn basic economic concepts such as cost-benefit analysis. Her students also learn about important economic concepts by developing a product to be sold for charity, tasking them with the responsibility of finding a producer, marketing the item and determining a price strategy.

Selected by an expert panel of judges this year’s winners stood out for their creativity and ability to effectively engage students. The honorees will each receive a $5,000 prize, and their school will receive a cash award of $2,500 to support economic and financial education. What’s more, they will also be offered the opportunity to share best practices with their colleagues by co-facilitating a training workshop for area teachers and sharing their best lessons with teachers nationwide through CEE’s online assets.

“We applaud these outstanding teachers for their innovation and dedication to making economic concepts come alive for their students,” said Nan J. Morrison, CEE President and CEO. “We hope that by bringing awareness to their achievements, these educators will serve as inspiration for their fellow teachers to bring economics and financial literacy to every classroom.”

About the Council for Economic Education

The Council for Economic Education (CEE) is the leading organization in the United States that focuses on the economic and financial education of students from kindergarten through high school—and we have been doing so for 65 years. CEE delivers the fourth “R”—a real-world understanding of how to build fruitful lives—to America’s young people. Our goal is to reach and teach every child to create a more informed citizenry capable of making better decisions as savers, investors, borrowers, voters and participants in the global economy. We do this by educating the educators: providing the curriculum tools, the pedagogical support, and the community of peers that instruct, inspire, and guide. All resources and programs are developed by educators, and delivered by our national network of affiliates—over 240 across the country. Last year, we trained more than 55,000 teachers; those teachers, in turn, we estimate, reached 5 million students.

For more information visit our website, www.councilforeconed.org
And our Facebook page, www.facebook.com/councilforeconed
Follow us on Twitter @council4econed

About the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation

The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation is a philanthropic, not-for-profit grantmaking institution based in New York City. Established in 1934 by Alfred Pritchard Sloan Jr., then-President and Chief Executive Officer of General Motors, the Foundation makes grants in support of original research and education in science, technology, engineering, mathematics and economic performance. The Alfred P. Sloan Teaching Champion Awards are funded through the Foundation’s Civic Initiatives program, which aims to benefit the New York City metropolitan area in ways that advance the Foundation’s mission. www.sloan.org.

The post CEE Honors New York Metro Area’s Top Economics Educators with 2014 Alfred P. Sloan Teaching Champion Awards appeared first on Council for Economic Education.

POSTED: August 13, 2014 | BY: brendan