L1: Needs and Wants
L2: Making Good Choices
L3: Producers / Consumers
L4: Service Workers
L5: Supply and Demand
100

What is a resource?

Something that we can use

100

What is a benefit?

A good result from a choice you make

100

What is income?

Money that people earn

100

What are three examples of service workers in the Anyang community?

(Possible answers: school nurses, police officers, librarians, taxi drivers, truck drivers, etc.)

100

How is trading different from bartering?

Trading is buying, selling, or exchanging goods or services with someone else. Bartering is trading goods or services WITHOUT money.

200

What does scarce mean?

There is not enough of something

200

What is opportunity cost?

The thing you give up when you make a choice

200

What is the difference between a producer and a consumer?

A producer is the person who makes or grows goods, a consumer is the person who buys and uses goods.

200

What are three different things teachers can specialize in?

(Possible answers: math, science, reading, phonics, music, gym, etc.)

200

How is supply different from demand?

Supply is how much of something there is, demand is how many people want something.

300

Which one of these is a WANT: new shoes, rice, or shampoo?

New shoes

300

What are two benefits of going to the science center instead of buying a family game?

1) Will learn how things work

2) Can do experiments

300

What is a capital resource?

A capital resource is a good made and used to produce other goods and services

300

What is the difference between having a skill and specializing?

A skill is knowing how to do something, but to specialize means to do one kind of thing very well

300

Why would orange producers in California trade with soybean producers in Iowa?

Because winters are warm in California for oranges, but Iowa has rich soil for soybeans. They can both get what they want if they trade.

400

Which one of these is NOT a resource: plants, money, or shelter?

Shelter

400

What would be the opportunity cost of choosing to buy a book instead of going to the movies?

The chance to go to the movies (you would lose this chance because you chose to buy a book instead)

400

What are two ways that human resources are helpful to a strawberry farmer?

1) Workers pick the strawberries when they are ripe

2) Workers put the strawberries on a truck that carries them to a market

400

How do we pay for community services and government workers?

Taxes -- money collected by the government to pay for services

400

Jessica and many other people in her city love fish. Sadly, they do not live near the water, and not many places nearby sell fish.

Will the fish producers charge a high price for the fish in Jessica's city?

Yes, because the supply is low and the demand is high.

500

Give one example of a way families have to make choices about what needs to buy.

(Possible answers: Families have to decide which food is best for us, which clothes will keep us warm and dry, where we will live, etc.)

500

What are the three steps for making choices?

1) Talk about the benefits of each choice.

2) Talk about the costs of each choice.

3) Think about the benefits and costs, and then make a choice.

500

What are two CAPITAL resources and two NATURAL resources that you need to grow strawberries?

CAPITAL: money, farm equipment, trucks

NATURAL: air, water, sunlight, soil

500

What are 4 examples of government workers that we have in Korea?

(Possible answers: police officers, firefighters, post office workers, mayors, governors, president, etc.)

500

Bob is a fish producer who lives by the ocean. Why can he not charge a high price for his fish? Explain using supply and demand.

If Bob sold for a high price, people would just buy from someone else. The supply is high, and the demand is low.