An independent charity that leverages the journalistic expertise of The Economist newspaper. We enable inspiring discussions about the news in, and between, schools. Discussions that invite young people to be curious about the world’s biggest ideas and challenges, and consider what should be done about them.
An independent charity that leverages the journalistic expertise of The Economist newspaper. We enable inspiring discussions about the news in, and between, schools. Discussions that invite young people to be curious about the world’s biggest ideas and challenges, and consider what should be done about them.
Six lessons to unpick numbers in the news.
Created with support from data experts at The Economist, the 6-hour unit of work helps 10-16 year-olds explore examples in the news, hear from data journalists and interrogate the reliability of data across four lively lessons before reflecting on their learning.
Students are encouraged to form their own conclusions and the final two lessons support learners to plan, create and share what they have to say about data decisions, presented in either audio, video or written format.
Is AI-generated art better than human creations? And is AI good or bad for the arts?
Use this one-hour lesson to help your students:
Understand how AI creates art
Explore how different arts are linked by the theme of AI
Discuss whether AI is good or bad for the arts
This workshop challenges students to think about plastics, packaging and sustainability. They’ll explore interesting questions like:
• What impact do plastics and packaging have on the
environment?
• Are all plastics bad?
• Whose responsibility is it to make a change?
Throughout, students will build essential Skills Builder skills: creativity, problem-solving, listening and speaking.
The whole workshop is student-led, so perfect for independent learning or home education.
Download a full scheme of work to explore numbers in the news and how the media can shape a story. The covid-19 pandemic has kept people glued to the news, but is there such a thing as too much information? Has the pandemic led to an infodemic?
Throughout the six hour-long lessons, students will use oracy to develop their numeracy skills, with a particular focus on the Skills Builder skills: creativity, problem-solving, speaking and listening.
This resource helps learners think for themselves about the power of headlines and the ways newspapers present their stories.
These activities provoke thinking on questions like:
How should newspapers choose their stories?
What responsibilities do they have to their audience?
How should the media report on a crisis?
After making editorial decisions, learners are encouraged to investigate the current news cycle and view it from different perspectives. Challenge your children to think deeper about the stories they see everyday and develop their news literacy and communication skills: reasoning, open-mindedness, scepticism and speaking up.
Photographs can shape our reactions to current affairs. How do we know when to trust them?
These fun activities help learners explore the role of photographs in the news and challenges them to step behind the lens themselves.
When should we believe our eyes? Get learners discussing this and a range of other questions:
How do photographs help us understand the news?
How should newspapers choose their photographs?
Do photographs give us the whole picture?
Learners are also tasked with finding ways to photograph the same thing in different ways. Can they create two contrasting impressions of the same subject?
In October 2020 the World Economic Forum released its most recent research into 300 of the world’s biggest companies. It showed that over 50% expect to speed up their plans for automation because of covid-19. With more robots in the workplace, who will be the winners and losers? Download these resources, supported by the Bank of England, to find out!
Use these activities to help answer this question and others about automation:
Why are business owners turning to robots?
What are the reasons why they shouldn’t?
What role might Artificial Intelligence play in the future of work?
What kinds of jobs might be better suited to robots?
How might automation affect your career plans?
How would perspectives differ?
This scheme of work includes everything you need to run six one-hour sessions for key stage 2 or 3 students on the financial system ten years on since the crisis.
It was produced by The Economist Educational Foundation, an independent charity set up by The Economist magazine. We combine The Economist’s journalistic know-how with teaching expertise, and we specialise in supporting teachers to facilitate high-quality classroom discussions about the news.
As a teacher, do I need to know anything about this topic?
Not at all. All the necessary information is provided!
What are the objectives?
To build students’ knowledge, skills and confidence.
STUDENTS WILL…
Learn about the financial system, how it affects them, and how people’s decisions determine whether it works well or goes wrong.
Build essential critical thinking and communication skills: reasoning, scepticism, curiosity, open-mindedness and storytelling. All the Foundation’s resources are designed to build these skills, as we believe they are essential for the modern world.
Develop the confidence to have their say. The six sessions will enable students to make well-informed, sound arguments for their opinions on this important and complex issue.
WHAT’S INCLUDED?
Multimedia news content
Detailed session guides for leading fun, interactive activities – no planning required
This scheme of work is supported by the Bank of England. The Economist Educational Foundation maintained full editorial control. The Bank contributed a video resource which explains what banks do, what the Bank of England does, what happened in the financial crisis and what is being done to make banks safer. We would like to thank the Bank for adding this resource and for helping to support our work.
Download the first in our new series of resources designed for form/pastoral time. In this resource, learners investigate why Donald Trump seeks to ban the social app TikTok.
Part 1: get thoughtful discussions going in as little as 20 minutes and develop key news-literacy skills: speaking, listening, creativity and problem-solving.
Part 2: dive deeper. Expand student’s understanding of this topic; structure thinking using evidence and examples, and generate hypotheses based on what has been learnt.
The download includes Part 1 and 2, sign up to receive them each week here.
A lot of the power to protect the planet lies within people’s lifestyle choices. Do we need tougher climate laws?
Ahead of Earth Day on April 22nd, help students understand the urgency of the “climate crisis” and debate whether laws should be adjusted.
This lesson gives you everything you need to facilitate a discussion with 9-16 year olds. Student develop essential skills, media literacy, knowledge about the news and every lesson relates to SDGs.
Get weekly free lessons on the news from The Economist Foundation via their Topical Talk website:
https://bit.ly/TT_Library
Strict lockdowns have caused pollution levels in many countries to plummet. Yet, as activity returns to normal, so will emissions. Many see the pandemic as a huge opportunity to press the reset button and build back better. But how? Get students talking about the balancing act of boosting the economy whilst protecting the environment.
Use this resource to help your learners:
Develop the skill of forming and supporting their opinion and use data to strengthen their reasoning
Improve their thinking by connecting one issue to another
Practise viewing a topic from different perspectives
Research the ways that disasters have led to positive change
This resource introduces students to the news and gets them answering key questions about where the news can be found and how the importance of a news story will differ from person to person. It could be used as part of PSHE, before looking at a particular story, to give students a better understanding of a news-report task.
This lesson helps to develop the following news literacy skills:
SCEPTICISM: Questioning information to find the truth
REASONING: Justifying a viewpoint
This resource was produced by The Economist Educational Foundation, an independent charity that was set up by The Economist magazine. Combining The Economist’s journalistic know-how with teaching expertise, we specialise in supporting teachers to facilitate high-quality classroom discussions about the news.
Give students a great revision activity to help them to understand current affairs. This resource covers content from The Economist Educational Foundation’s home learning resources. Haven’t used all of our resources yet? No problem - they can all be downloaded here.
There’s ten answers to find, all lurking within the resources we’ve sent out since the start of lockdown in March. Can your learners collect them all?
This resource gives clues for where to find answers to questions like:
What do you call someone who has been blamed for something that wasn’t their fault?
What sport does Colin Kaepernick play?
Which “hat” helps you create humour, according to Kal, The Economist’s cartoonist?
To spice things up, why not add a time limit or make it a race?
Download Part 2 of our activity pack on whether sport and politics should mix. Through this activity, learners can hear from a range of perspectives on this question and stage their own radio debate!
This resource investigates several pressing questions:
Should sport and politics mix?
What are the arguments on either side of the debate?
Why is it important to hear from several perspectives?
This resource encourages learners to support their views with evidence but doesn’t need lots of prior knowledge about sport.
These activities build on the resources in part one which you can download here.
Download a resource to help learners understand the military coup in Myanmar, and whether military rule spells the end of democracy in the region.
Help your students to explore key vocabulary like; coup, opposition and dictatorship and answer questions such as:
How much power do the people in Myanmar have? Why?
Why might the military rule work / not work?
Who is responsible for helping the people in Myanmar?
What other perspectives might help you think differently about this?
The race between infection and injection is on. Several vaccines have been developed but how should they be distributed?
Uncover the situation so far in the global quest to vaccinate populations against the covid-19, then delve deeper into questions about how vaccines should be distributed fairly.
How can a cyber attack shut off an oil pipeline?
This resource introduces students to what a cyber attack is using examples and helps learners think about why they could increasingly become a threat.
Use these activities to help learners discover the story of Alexei Navalny, a prominent critic of President Vladimir Putin, who was poisoned with the nerve agent Novichok.
What do we know so far? What are governments saying about the case? Is the Russian government guilty of attempted murder?
Use this resource to help your learners:
Discover the details behind the headlines
Answer questions from several perspectives
Assess the story’s importance to different people
This resource gives students the opportunity to discuss and make judgements on real examples of politicians’ behaviour, leading to ethical questions about justice, democracy, responsibility and power. It complements the National Curriculum for England: KS2-4 Citizenship, including the role and responsibilities of Parliament.
This resource helps to develop the following skills:
SCEPTICISM: Questioning information to find the truth
REASONING: Justifying a viewpoint
SPEAKING UP: Confidently communicating a viewpoint
OPEN-MINDEDNESS: Listening to other viewpoints
These resources were produced by The Economist Educational Foundation,
an independent charity that was set up by The Economist magazine.
We combine The Economist’s journalistic know-how with teaching expertise, and we specialise in supporting teachers to facilitate high-quality classroom discussions about the news.
This resource helps students to explore whether sportsplayers should share political opinions on the field. It is packed with pertinent questions such as:
What happens when sport and politics mix?
Is it acceptable to express political opinions on the field?
Do sportspeople have greater responsibilities than others?
This resource encourages learners to support their views with evidence but doesn’t need lots of prior knowledge about sport.
This is the first of two resources exploring sport in the news. You can download Part 2 here.