National Council on Economic Education Students
NCEE HomeNCEE StoreContact Us
Programs News About Us Resources Network contributors
Search    
EconomicsInternational
EconomicsInternational®
information
applications
research
publications & materials
Roosters to Robots
Old MacDonald to
Uncle Sam
Resources A to Z
Nexus
Economics from
Here to There

EconomicsAmerica®

EconomicsExchange®

Print Version

Email Page

Centuries of Economic Growth: From Feathers to Robotics
by Angela Bullock and Sara Paul (USA), Anzhela Yevgushchenko (Ukraine), Vesselka Yotkova (Bulgaria)

LESSON DESCRIPTION

Students read scenarios about the production of Bibles over five historical time periods. Working in small groups, students create skits and develop a retrieval chart that is used to analyze factors that impact economic growth.

AGE LEVEL

14-19 years old

CONCEPTS

  • economic growth
  • labor productivity

CONTENT STANDARDS

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

BENCHMARKS

Economic growth is a sustained rise in a nation's production of goods and services. It results from investments in human and physical capital, research and development, technological change, and improved institutional arrangements and incentives.

When individuals, regions, and nations specialize in what they can produce at the lowest cost and then trade with others, both production and consumption increase.

Labor productivity is output per worker.

OBJECTIVES

  • Students will define labor productivity.
  • Students will identify factors that contribute to increases in productivity
  • Students will explain the relationship between increases in productivity and economic growth.
  • Students will explain why increasing productivity is important to an economy and individuals.

TIME REQUIRED

two class periods

MATERIALS

  • copy of Activities 1 and 2 for each student
  • transparencies of Visuals 1 and 2
  • transparency of Activity 1

PROCEDURE

Day 1

  1. Tell students that for the next two days they will study factors that have influenced economic growth over time.
  2. Use Visual 1 and display the definition for economic growth. Explain that economic growth means producing increased amounts of goods and services over the long term. If the people in a nation want to experience an increase in their material standard of living, they must produce more goods and services. If output does not grow, one person or group can only obtain more goods and services if some other individual or group receives less.
  3. Refer to Visual 1 and read the definition for labor productivity. Explain that to calculate labor productivity, output is divided by the time worked multiplied by the number of workers.
  4. Model computing labor productivity using the data in problem 1.

    30 cars = 1 car per hour
    10 workers x 3 hours

  5. Tell students to calculate the answer for problem two. (15 cars)
  6. Distribute copies of Activities 1 and 2 to each student. Divide students into five groups. Assign each group one of the five scenarios from Activity 2.
  7. Have each group read its assigned scenario and complete the appropriate section of Activity 1 for its time period.
  8. Tell groups to create a skit that depicts the information in Activity 1 for their scenario. Inform groups that the skits will be presented at the beginning of the next class. Encourage students to bring in props.

Day 2

  1. Display Visual 2. Explain that as each group presents a skit, the remaining students are to complete Activity 2 for the appropriate time period using information from the skit.
  2. Following each skit, have group members review the correct answers for Activity 1 with the class. Ask one group member to write the correct answers in the appropriate column on Visual 2.
  3. Once all skits have been presented, discuss the following.
    1. What happened to labor productivity from 800AD to 2003?
      (increased)
    2. What factors contributed to this change in labor productivity?
      (education and training, improvements in equipment and technology)
    3. What impact does an increase in labor productivity have on economic growth?
      (More output can be produced with the same amount of labor. When an economy produces more goods and services with available resources, economic growth occurs.)
    4. What is necessary for an economy to experience economic growth?
      (investment in factories, machinery, new technology, and the health, education and training of people)
    5. How does an increase in a nation's economic growth affect the material standard of living of its people?
      (The material standard of living for a society improves when an increase in real output of goods and services occurs relative to the growth in population. In the United States, as a result of the growth in real output relative to the growth of the population, the material standard of living has improved.)
    6. Tell students that capitalist countries have experienced impressive economic growth during this century. In the United States, real output has increased 15-fold since 1900 while population has only tripled. Ask students: What does this mean for the average United States resident?
      (Five times more goods and services are available to the average United States resident today than were available in 1900.)

CLOSURE

Review the main points of the lesson.

  1. What is economic growth?
    (a sustained rise in a nation's production of goods and services)
  2. What is labor productivity?
    (output per worker per hour)
  3. What factors contribute to an increase in labor productivity?
    (investment in education and training, new technology and equipment)
  4. What is the relationship between productivity and economic growth?
    (Economic growth results from increases in productivity.)
  5. Why are people in a society concerned about increasing productivity?
    (When a society experiences increasing productivity, it can lead to improvement in the material standard of living for the people.)

ASSESSMENT

  1. Display Visual 2. Have students write a short paragraph explaining why their president is concerned about this problem and what recommendations they would make to correct it.
    (Low productivity growth over time means the country's standard of living is not rising. Recommendations should include investment in health, education and training of people, new technology and equipment, and new factories.)

EXTENSION

  1. Select a country and compare the standard of living of individuals in this country over three time periods and explain the relationship between productivity growth and standard of living.
  2. Gather current and historical data on real GDP per capita for four different countries such as the United States, Ukraine, Latvia, and Japan. Analyze the data and explain the relationship between economic growth and standard of living.

A Rooster and a Bean Seed

Folding Our Way to Productivity

Gross Domestic Pizza

What, How and For Whom to Produce?

Clothes From Grain: A Miracle or a Problem?

Centuries of Economic Growth: From Feathers to Robotics

 

Copyright © 2008 National Council on Economic Education. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Contact Us | 1.800.338.1192