Dania Ewodage is my name. I am a Nigerian, married with children. A profession teacher with years of experience and certified by the C.I.E, I hold a BSc. and Masters degrees both in economics, and the U.K. Inst. of Marketing diploma. I am also a Consultant and Pastor.
Dania Ewodage is my name. I am a Nigerian, married with children. A profession teacher with years of experience and certified by the C.I.E, I hold a BSc. and Masters degrees both in economics, and the U.K. Inst. of Marketing diploma. I am also a Consultant and Pastor.
Cash -flow forecasting …Ppt + Lesson Plan Bundle
Explain Cash-flow forecasting and working capital. Identify and explain the importance of cash and of cash-flow forecasting: • Why cash is important to a business. • What a cash-flow forecast is, how a simple one is constructed and the importance of it. • Amend or complete a simple cash-flow forecast. • How to interpret a simple cash-flow forecast. • How a short-term cash-flow problem might be overcome, e.g. increasing loans, delaying payments, asking debtors to pay more quickly. Working capital: • The concept and importance of working capital.
Class Activity with Solutions.
Get rid of teaching stress! Aim for the A* stars!!
PPt + Lesson Plan Bundle;
Market-orientated businesses (uses of market research information to a business)• Primary research and secondary research (benefits and limitations of each) • Methods of primary research, e.g. postalquestionnaire, …, focus groups• The need for sampling • Methods of secondary research, • Factors influencing the accuracy of market research data. ‘Class Activity, Question and Answers.
Get rid of teaching stress! Aim for the A* stars!!
Market economic system ‘ppt’ complete lesson + Lesson Plan Bundle:
Define market - Including the roles of the private sector (firms and consumers) and the public sector in a market economy. Advantages and disadvantages of the market economic system - how it works in a variety of different countries. Class Activities and Answers, etc.
LESSON OBJECTIVE: are shared with the student for awareness and expectation of lesson outcome.
At the end of the lesson, the students will be able to;
Define price elasticity of supply (PES). Calculate PES using the formula and interpreting the significance of the result. Draw and interpret supply curve diagrams to show different PES.
Determinants of PES - The key influences on whether supply is elastic or inelastic. Significance of PES - The implications for decision making by consumers, producers and government.
Topic: Supply Lesson Plan IGCSE Economics- ‘MS word doc.’
Lesson Objective: are shared with the students for awareness and expectation of lesson outcome.
At the end of the lesson, the students will be able to;
Define supply - drawing and interpretation of appropriate diagrams. Price and supply - A supply curve to be drawn and used to illustrate movements along a supply curve with appropriate terminology, for example extensions and contractions in supply.
Individual and market supply - The link between individual and market supply in terms of aggregation. Conditions of supply - The causes of shifts in a supply curve with appropriate terminology, for example increase and decrease in supply
NB: You can add your school’s name, and logo on top, you own name, date, and class year, term and week. Also, you can rejig it for more than a lesson topic by editing the objectives, Plenary and lesson starter etc.
Topic: Price Changes Lesson Plan IGCSE Economics- ‘MS word doc.’
Lesson Objective: are shared with the students for awareness and expectation of lesson outcome.
At the end of the lesson, the students will be able to;
Describe competitive markets. Identify and explain causes of price changes. Changing market conditions as causes of price changes.
Identify and explain consequences of price changes - Demand and supply diagrams to be used to illustrate these changes in market conditions and their consequences for equilibrium price and sales.
NB: You can add your school’s name, and logo on top, you own name, date, and class year, term and week. Also, you can rejig it for more than a lesson topic by editing the objectives, Plenary and lesson starter etc.
Topic: Price Determination Lesson Plan IGCSE Economics- ‘MS word doc.’
Lesson Objective: are shared with the students for awareness and expectation of lesson outcome.
At the end of the lesson, the students will be able to;
Define market equilibrium, draw and interpret demand and supply schedules and curves used to establish equilibrium price and sales in a market.
Define market disequilibrium - draw and interpret demand and supply schedules and curves used to identify disequilibrium prices and shortages (demand exceeding supply) and surpluses (supply exceeding demand).
NB: You can add your school’s name, and logo on top, you own name, date, and class year, term and week. Also, you can rejig it for more than a lesson topic by editing the objectives, Plenary and lesson starter etc.
Topic: Money and Banking Lesson Plan IGCSE Economics- ‘MS word doc.’
Lesson Objective: are shared with the students for awareness and expectation of lesson outcome.
At the end of the lesson, the students will be able to;
Define money, the forms, functions and characteristics of money.
Banking - The role and importance of central banks and commercial banks for government, producers and consumers.
NB: You can add your school’s name, and logo on top, you own name, date, and class year, term and week. Also, you can rejig it for more than a lesson topic by editing the objectives, Plenary and lesson starter etc.
Topic:Microeconomic Decision Makers - Households Lesson Plan IGCSE Economics- ‘MS word doc.’
Lesson Objective: are shared with the students for awareness and expectation of lesson outcome.
At the end of the lesson, the students will be able to;
Describe the influences on spending, saving and borrowing Including income, the rate of interest and confidence – between different households and over time.
NB: You can add your school’s name, and logo on top, you own name, date, and class year, term and week. Also, you can rejig it for more than a lesson topic by editing the objectives, Plenary and lesson starter etc.
Topic: Micro and Macroeconomics The Role of Markets Resources Allocation Lesson Plan IGCSE Economics- ‘MS word doc.’
Lesson Objective: are shared with the students for awareness and expectation of lesson outcome.
At the end of the lesson, the students will be able to;
Describe microeconomics and macroeconomics - The difference between microeconomics and macroeconomics and the decision makers involved in each.
The market system - How a market system works; including buyers, sellers, allocation of scarce resources, market equilibrium, and market disequilibrium.
Key resources allocation decisions - Establishing that the economic problem creates three key questions about determining resource allocation. – What to produce, how, and for whom. -
Introduction to the price mechanism - How the price mechanism provides answers to these key allocation questions.
NB: You can add your school’s name, and logo on top, you own name, date, and class year, term and week. Also, you can rejig it for more than a lesson topic by editing the objectives, Plenary and lesson starter etc.
Topic: Market Economic Systems Lesson Plan IGCSE Economics- ‘MS word doc.’
Lesson Objective: are shared with the students for awareness and expectation of lesson outcome.
At the end of the lesson, the students will be able to;
Define market economic system - Including the roles of the private sector (firms and consumers) and the public sector (government) in a market economy.
Advantages and disadvantages of the market economic system - Including examples of how it works in a variety of different countries.
NB: You can add your school’s name, and logo on top, you own name, date, and class year, term and week. Also, you can rejig it for more than a lesson topic by editing the objectives, Plenary and lesson starter etc.
Lesson Plan
Topic: International specialisation Lesson Plan IGCSE Economics- ‘MS word doc.’
Lesson Objective: are shared with the students for awareness and expectation of lesson outcome.
At the end of the lesson, the students will be able to;
Specialisation at a national level - The basis for Specialisation at national level in broad terms of: superior resource allocation and/or cheaper production methods. Advantages and disadvantages of specialization at a national level - For consumers, firms and the economy.
NB: You can add your school’s name, and logo on top, you own name, date, and class year, term and week. Also, you can rejig it for more than a lesson topic by editing the objectives, Plenary and lesson starter etc.
Lesson Plan
Topic: Factors of Production Lesson Plan IGCSE Economics- ‘MS word doc.’
Lesson Objective: are shared with the students for awareness and expectation of lesson outcome.
At the end of the lesson, the students will be able to;
Identify and define the factors of production and their rewards - Give examples of land, labour, capital and enterprise and the nature of each factor of production.
Mobility of the factors of production - The influences on the mobility of the various factors. Quantity and quality of the factors of production - The causes of changes in the quantity and quality of the various factors.
NB: You can add your school’s name, and logo on top, you own name, date, and class year, term and week. Also, you can rejig it for more than a lesson topic by editing the objectives, Plenary and lesson starter etc.
Lesson Plan
Topic: Demand Lesson Plan IGCSE Economics- ‘MS word doc.’
Lesson Objective: are shared with the students for awareness and expectation of lesson outcome.
At the end of the lesson, the students will be able to;
Define demand draw and interpret appropriate diagrams. Price and demand - A demand curve to be drawn and used to illustrate movements along a demand curve with appropriate terminology, for example extensions and contractions in demand.
Individual and market demand - The link between individual and market demand in terms of aggregation. Conditions of demand - The causes of shifts in a demand curve with appropriate terminology, for example increase and decrease in demand.
NB: You can add your school’s name, and logo on top, you own name, date, and class year, term and week. Also, you can rejig it for more than a lesson topic by editing the objectives, Plenary and lesson starter etc.
Lesson Plan
Topic: Market Failure Lesson Plan IGCSE Economics- ‘MS word doc.’
Lesson Objective: are shared with the students for awareness and expectation of lesson outcome.
At the end of the lesson, the students will be able to;
Define market failure - The key terms associated with market failure: public good, merit good, demerit good, social benefits, external benefits, private benefits, social costs,
external costs, private costs. Causes of market failure - With respect to public goods, merit and demerit goods, external costs and external benefits, abuse of monopoly power and factor immobility. Examples of market failure with respect to these areas only.
Consequences of market failure - The implications of misallocation of resources in
respect of the over consumption of demerit goods and goods with external costs, and the under consumption of merit goods and goods with external benefits. Note: demand and supply diagrams relating to market failure are not required.
NB: You can add your school’s name, and logo on top, you own name, date, and class year, term and week. Also, you can rejig it for more than a lesson topic by editing the objectives, Plenary and lesson starter etc.
Lesson Plan
Topic: Living standards Lesson Plan IGCSE Economics- ‘MS word doc.’
Lesson Objective: are shared with the students for awareness and expectation of lesson outcome.
At the end of the lesson, the students will be able to;
State and describe indicators of living standards; Real GDP per head and the Human Development Index (HDI). The components of real GDP and HDI. The advantages and
disadvantages of real GDP and HDI. Comparing living standards and income
Distribution; Reasons for differences in living standards and income distribution within and between countries.
NB: You can add your school’s name, and logo on top, you own name, date, and class year, term and week. Also, you can rejig it for more than a lesson topic by editing the objectives, Plenary and lesson starter etc.
Lesson Plan
Topic:Inflation and deflation Lesson Plan IGCSE Economics- ‘MS word doc.’
Lesson Objective: are shared with the students for awareness and expectation of lesson outcome.
At the end of the lesson, the students will be able to;
Define inflation and deflation. Measurement of inflation and deflation using the Consumer Prices Index (CPI).
Causes of inflation and deflation - Causes of inflation: demand-pull and cost-push. Causes of deflation: demand-side and supply-side.
Consequences of inflation and deflation - The consequences of inflation and deflation for consumers, workers, savers, lenders, firms and the economy as a whole. Policies to control inflation and deflation. The range of policies available to control inflation and deflation and how effective they might be.
NB: You can add your school’s name, and logo on top, you own name, date, and class year, term and week. Also, you can rejig it for more than a lesson topic by editing the objectives, Plenary and lesson starter etc.
Lesson Plan
Topic: Firms’ Costs, Revenue and Objectives Lesson Plan IGCSE Economics- ‘MS word doc.’
Lesson Objective: are shared with the students for awareness and expectation of lesson outcome.
At the end of the lesson, the students will be able to;
define costs of production - Total cost (TC), average total cost (ATC), fixed cost (FC), variable cost (VC), average fixed cost (AFC), average variable cost (AVC). Note: marginal cost not required.
Calculation of costs of production - TC, ATC, FC, VC, AFC and AVC. Definition, drawing and interpretation of diagrams that show how changes in output affect costs of production.
Definition of revenue - Total revenue (TR) and average revenue (AR). Note: marginal revenue is not required. Calculation of TR and AR.
Objectives of firms - The influence of sales on revenue. Survival, social welfare, profit maximisation and growth.
NB: You can add your school’s name, and logo on top, you own name, date, and class year, term and week. Also, you can rejig it for more than a lesson topic by editing the objectives, Plenary and lesson starter etc.
Lesson Plan
Topic: Firms and Classification of Firms Lesson Plan IGCSE Economics- ‘MS word doc.’
Lesson Objective: are shared with the students for awareness and expectation of lesson outcome.
At the end of the lesson, the students will be able to;
Classify firms - In terms of primary/secondary/tertiary sectors and private/public sector, and the relative size of firms. Note: detailed knowledge of different types of structure of a firm is not required. Small firms - The advantages and disadvantages of small firms, the challenges facing small firms and reasons for their existence. Causes and forms of the growth of firms - Internal growth, for example increased market share. External growth, for example mergers.
Mergers - Examples, advantages and disadvantages of different types of mergers: horizontal, vertical, and conglomerate. Economies and diseconomies of scale - How internal and external economies and diseconomies of scale can affect a firm/industry as the scale of production changes.
NB: You can add your school’s name, and logo on top, you own name, date, and class year, term and week. Also, you can rejig it for more than a lesson topic by editing the objectives, Plenary and lesson starter etc.
Lesson Plan
Topic:Employment and unemployment rates Lesson Plan IGCSE Economics- ‘MS word doc.’
Lesson Objective: are shared with the students for awareness and expectation of lesson outcome.
At the end of the lesson, the students will be able to;
Define employment, unemployment and full employment. Describe the nature and causes of the of changing patterns and level of employment - for example increase in proportion of workers employed in the tertiary sector and formal economy as an economy develops; a greater proportion of women in the labour force due to changes in social attitudes; decline in the proportion employed in the public sector as a country moves towards a market economy. How unemployment is measured – claimant count and labour force survey – and the formula for the unemployment rate. Causes/types of unemployment - Frictional, structural and cyclical unemployment. Consequences of unemployment - The consequences of unemployment for the individual, firms and the economy as a whole. Identify and explain - the range of policies available to reduce unemployment and how effective they might be.
NB: You can add your school’s name, and logo on top, you own name, date, and class year, term and week. Also, you can rejig it for more than a lesson topic by editing the objectives, Plenary and lesson starter etc.