| Suggested Target Age:
Grades 6-12 Topics Covered: stock
market investing and other investment options; investment risk and
return rates; reading stock tables and researching stocks
Time Required: 45 minutes What
Will the Students Learn? - How
to read the stock pages of a newspaper
- The
concepts of capital gains and dividends
- The
lesson will reinforce principles from the
All About Investing Part 1
lesson on risk, rates of return, liquidity, and diversification
State
Contents Standards Key Virginia: Civics and Economics:
CE.10; Economics and Financial Literacy: Objectives 1, 14. Indiana: Economics: E.1.11;
Florida: Social Studies: SS.D.1.4
Mathematics: M.A.A. 3.3 California:
none identified NOTE: This lesson
requires computers or Internet access at the end. If there are not
enough computers for all the students to use at once, you can divide
the class in half and have half of them play the Loss or
Gain? Game
while the other half uses computers to log into Economis. Then have the
groups switch. Materials
Needed:
NOTE: Instructors for this lesson should study the article, Stocks: The Basics, and the
Money Smarts Quiz and Answer Key and get familiar and
comfortable with the language and concepts in these documents. If this
information is very unfamiliar, it may be a good idea to invite a guest
speaker from a bank or investment firm in to teach this particular
lesson.
- Read and review the
Loss or Gain? Game Overview and complete the necessary preparations as
instructed. Preparations will vary depending on whether you choose to
do the Bucket Toss Version or the Water Balloon Version of the game.
- Read the short article,
Stocks: The Basics and make enough copies for every student in
the class. Note the author’s use of the analogy of an auction for the
stock market. You will begin today’s lesson by having students
participate in a short, pretend auction.
- Write
the definitions of rate
of return, risk, liquidity, and diversification (see below
for the definitions) on the blackboard, whiteboard, or some other
prominent place in the classroom.
- Rate of Return – how fast your money grows.
Sometimes investors use “interest rate” as a synonym for rate of return.
- Risk – the degree of uncertainty about
the expected return from an investment, including the possibility that
some or all of the investment may be lost.
- Liquidity – the ease with which an
investment can be turned into cash, without a significant loss of value.
- Diversification -- the reduction of investment risk
by spreading your invested dollars among several different investments.
- Make copies of the financial pages of a major newspaper
showing the info on stocks and give one copy to each student.
- Print out and familiarize yourself with the
Auctioneer’s
Instructions. Print out and cut up the six
Auction Bidder Profiles.
Lesson Plan: Introductory Activity:
Select seven students at the beginning of class. Bring them up front.
Give each one of six of the students one of the bidder’s profiles, and
tell them to keep their profile private – not show it to anyone.
Explain that you will be holding an auction and that each of them will
be bidding on items that they might wish to purchase, given their
profile. Then have those six students return to their seats. Explain to
the 7th student that he/she will be the auctioneer in the second round
– you will serve as auctioneer in the first round and this student can
take his/her turn, imitating your example.
Explain
to the class that for a starting activity, you will be holding a short
auction. There will be two lots for sale at this auction. Go ahead and
introduce the first lot (corn) and tell what the total product
availability is for sale and say that the closing price at yesterday’s
market was $15 per bushel. Then go ahead and open the bidding, starting
at $15/bushel. The three students whose bidder’s profiles indicate
their company’s interest in purchasing corn should now start bidding,
and you play auctioneer, raising the price in 50 cent increments.
Once
a buyer for the corn has been established, turn over the auctioneer’s
“podium” to the student auctioneer and have him/her lead the auction
for the second lot, of flats of silicon. Have this person return to
his/her seat when the second lot is sold.
- Following
the auction, ask the bidders how they knew how much they could bid.
(They had to determine the highest unit price they could afford.)
Explain that the auctioneer’s job was to serve as a matchmaker between
the sellers and the buyers (bidders). Now state that the stock market
works much like an auction. Pass out copies of the short article, Stocks: The Basics.
Tell the students that today you will be focusing on learning about
stocks.
- Reiterate the point
from the article that the stock market is like an auction. The stock
market acts as an intermediary, just as the auctioneer does. The
bidders were not buying the products from the auctioneer; he/she was
just a match-making, trying to match sellers with buyers. The prices of
stocks on the stock market are determined by how much buyers are
willing to pay for the stocks.
- Ask
the students what investments they have already learned about. (They
should be able to mention things like CDs, savings accounts, and money
market accounts from the previous lesson.) Tell them that over the
long-term, one of the best investments in the USA has been the stock
market. As the article, Stocks:
The Basics, says, “In the history of the U.S. stock
markets, common stocks have had an average annual return of about 14
percent since the end of World War II.” Of course, the stock market
does go up and down and there is risk involved in investing in stocks.
Ask them to name problems they may have heard about with the stock
market (e.g., the “Great Crash” of 1929 and the subsequent Great
Depression, and the big drop in the stock market after the “dot.com”
bubble).
- Review the
definitions learned in the previous lesson about rates of return, risk,
liquidity, and diversification. Then ask if anyone can remember the
definition of stocks. (Answer: Stocks
are investments that represent ownership in a company.)
- Introduce
two new concepts that are important when thinking about stocks: capital
gains and dividends. Ask if anyone knows the definition of these terms.
Then write them on the board:
- Capital gain – the difference between the
purchase price of the stock and the selling price the investor gets
when selling it. Hopefully the selling price is higher than the
purchase price and this earning is called a capital gain.
- Dividends – a portion of a company’s
profits paid out to shareholders.
- When
you own stock in a company and the company does well and earns money,
it will share some of its earnings with the people who own company
stock (these people are called shareholders). A shareholder can keep
earning dividends for as long as she holds the stock and the company is
paying out dividends. A capital gain occurs just one time – when the
shareholder sells the stock, and the selling price is higher than the
person paid when she first bought the stock.
- Now
pass out the copies of the financial pages of the newspaper and have
everyone turn to the stock tables.
- Ask
the students what they already know about how to read the stock tables.
(Some may be familiar with the idea of stock symbols or be able to
explain what the numbers in the change column mean.)
- Write
the following definitions down on the board:
- Stock: The name of the stock is listed
here. If the stock has a long name, it will be abbreviated to fit into
the column.
- Last: Stock prices can rise and fall
during any time when shares are traded. This column shows the final
stock price of the day.
- Change: This column shows how much the
stock’s price changed from the previous day’s closing price.
- Explain to
the students that every company that sells stock has a unique symbol.
- Point
out some of the symbols in stock tables and tell the students the
companies that they represent. For example, find “AAPL” and tell the
students that it stands for Apple Inc. Ask them if they know which
stocks other stock symbols represent. (Some common ones are SBUX for
Starbucks and XRX for Xerox.)
- Tell
the students that they can find the symbols for any company on the
Economis website and that you will be showing how to do that at the end
of this lesson.
- In
the stock table handouts, have the students identify the “last” and
“change” columns. Ask students about the final stock prices of
different companies. When they tell you the answer, ask them what it
means (that the final
stock price at the closing of yesterday was [blank]).
- Ask the students how much different companies’
stocks changed. When they answer, ask them what it means (that the stock’s price changed
[blank] amount from the previous day’s closing).
Closing
Activities
- Take the students
into the computer lab and have them log into their Economis accounts.
- Tell
them that with Economis,
they can build a virtual stock portfolio. They can purchase shares of
stock and if those stocks go up in value, they will realize a profit.
(Of course, if their stocks go down in value, they will experience a
loss!) Also, they can put stocks on a “watch list.” This means that
they won’t own the stock, but they can monitor its performance for a
while and then decide whether or not to buy it. Under the Online Finances
menu, have them choose Manage
Your Finances. Then have them click My Stock Portfolio
at the top of the page. On the right side of the screen, click “Click here to find
a company’s symbol.” On the following page, the students may enter the
name of any company and find the symbol. Have them all type in HOG (for
Harley Davidson). Then explain that the information they see on the
screen is the real-world, real-time information from Wall Street.
- Using
Economis,
have each of the students find the symbol,
last, and change for three
companies. (You may
want to come prepared with a listing of several popular companies and
their stock symbols. Walk around the room to assist and answer
questions.)
- When
all the students have identified three stocks and had a chance to
purchase some stock (if they wished) or put stocks on their “watch
list,” re-gather everyone to play the Loss or Gain? Investment Game.
Click here for the Game Overview.
Optional Closing Activity
Ask
all or some of the questions on the
Money Smarts Quiz out loud
to the entire class. Record their answers on the blackboard. Or you
could pass out hard copies of the quiz and make it a contest – the
student with the top score wins a certain amount of [your currency] for
their Economis account. Or you could give all students who score
perfectly on the quiz some reward.
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