JA
Global Marketplace provides practical information
about the global economy and its effect on students’
lives. Six required, volunteer-led activities.
The key
learning objectives listed beside each activity state
the skills and knowledge students will gain.
|
Activity One: “X” Marks the Spot
Working in groups to identify import items found
throughout the classroom, students begin to
recognize that trade with other countries
affects their daily lives. Students understand
that international trade occurs when nations
want or need resources or services from other
countries because they themselves cannot satisfy
those needs and wants at reasonable costs.
|
Key Learning Objectives
Students will be able to:
-
define trade.
-
explain why countries trade with one
another.
-
list at least five products or items
imported from other countries and locate
those countries on a world map.
|
|
Activity Two: You Be the Judge
Students learn that nations use several methods
to increase their trade benefits. Agreements
with one or more countries often are made to
facilitate trade and
avoid conflict. |
Key Learning Objectives
Students will be able to:
-
identify quotas, tariffs, subsidies,
embargoes, and standards as barriers
governments use to control trade and
increase benefits for their countries.
-
describe how multilateral agreements can
facilitate trade.
-
describe how the World Trade Organization
functions as a court to help nations settle
trade disputes.
|
|
Activity Three: Let’s Make a Deal
Students work in groups to identify and
understand the business practices used in other
countries. Students discover that business
practices vary from country to country and that
understanding these practices can have a
positive impact on trade. |
Key Learning Objectives
Students will be able to:
-
explain how cultural practices vary from
country to country.
-
develop group plans to create a food
franchise by learning about the business
practices of select countries.
|
|
Activity Four: People Power
Students discover how the movement of people
facilitates international trade. They discuss
examples of immigration and, through creative
activities, gain insight into the lives of
immigrants. They learn that economic opportunity
often is the driving force behind immigration
and global trade. |
Key Learning Objectives
Students will be able to:
-
describe reasons why people move from one
country to another, particularly those
seeking economic opportunity.
-
give examples of contributions immigrants
bring to countries and the hardships they
often endure.
-
identify global trade and immigration as a
means of international exchange of human
resources.
|
|
Activity Five: World of Words
Students discover how advances in communication
and transportation have improved productivity
and facilitated world trade. From moveable type
to the Internet, students trace the
international flow of information and its impact
on world economies. |
Key Learning Objectives
Students will be able to:
-
describe how improvements in technology and
transportation and the sharing of ideas have
affected the flow of information and
increased productivity.
-
calculate productivity.
-
list examples of technological developments
throughout history.
|
|
Activity Six: World of Money
To
participate in international trade, businesses
and individuals must be able to purchase goods
and services from each other. Students will
learn that countries have different currencies
with different values. To purchase goods from
another country, it usually is necessary to use
that country’s currency. Some European countries
have facilitated the exchange process by
adopting the euro as a common currency.
|
Key Learning Objectives
Students will be able to:
-
explain why international trade requires an
exchange of currency.
-
convert U.S. dollars into another currency
using an exchange rate.
-
provide possible reasons why
countries might support or oppose a common
currency.
|
JA Global
Marketplace enhances students’ learning of the
following concepts and skills:
Concepts–Trade,
Market, Domestic trade, International trade, Exports,
Trade barrier, Quota, Subsidy, Embargo, Tariff,
Standard, Business practices, Culture, Franchise, Global
trade, Immigrate, Emigrate, Entrepreneurship, Human
resources, Productivity, Technology, Exchange rates,
Currency
Skills–Interpreting
maps, charts, and globes, Oral and written
communication, Working in groups, Gathering and
organizing information, Critical reading, Persuasion,
compromise, and bargaining, Analyzing points of view,
Brainstorming, Critical thinking, Math calculations
JA Global
Marketplace was purposefully and strategically
developed to align with academic content areas,
specifically with world history, geography, and social
studies disciplines. This program’s focus on reading,
writing, and mathematics standards ensures relevance in
all classrooms affected by high-stakes testing.
JA Global
Marketplace is a series of six activities
recommended for students in sixth, seventh, and eighth
grades. The average time for each activity is 45
minutes. Extended learning opportunities were developed
to enhance and extend the learning of these core
activities. JA Global Marketplace contains an
optional CD-ROM supplement designed as an interactive,
take-home piece for students. Materials are packaged in
a self-contained kit that includes detailed activity
plans for the volunteer and materials for 32 students.
All JA
programs are designed to support the skills and
competencies identified by the Partnership for 21st
Century Skills. These programs also augment
school-based, work-based, and connecting activities for
communities with school-to-work initiatives.
|