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U.S. and Global Economics - Summer Session
U.S. and Global Economics offers a tightly focused and scaffolded curriculum that provides an introduction to key economic principles. The course covers fundamental properties of economics, including an examination of markets from both historical and current perspectives; the basics of supply and demand; the theories of early economic philosophers such as Adam Smith and David Ricardo; theories of value; the concept of money and how it evolved; the role of banks, investment houses, and the Federal Reserve; Keynesian economics; the productivity, wages, investment, and growth involved in capitalism; unemployment, inflations, and the national debt; and a survey of markets in areas such as China, Europe, and the Middle East.
U.S. and Global Economics is designed to fall in the fourth year of social studies instruction. Students perfect their analytic writing through a scaffolded series of analytic assignments and written lesson tests. They also apply basic mathematics to economic concepts. Students read selections from annotated primary documents and apply those readings to the course content.
1/2 Credit
Course Level: Core and Honors Available
Prerequisites: U.S. Government and Politics is recommended, but not required
Materials: None Required
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Please note -
- Some courses require additional materials; see course descriptions for more details
- Course supplies may be easily obtained by visiting our online store on Amazon.com
Please contact Michelle Christie if you have difficulty purchasing class materials - For Extra Teacher Support – 5 hours – $300 (please add to registration if desired)
- Course fee includes a $150 non-refundable registration fee


