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Chapter 03: Making choices

Chapter 03: Making choices

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👩 Teacher’s Guide

🎯 Objective

Students will be able to:

  • Explain how individuals make choices under scarcity
  • Describe why choices can be unexpected due to incentives and behavior
  • Understand how businesses and governments influence decisions

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📝 Teaching Notes

  • Key idea to emphasize: People respond to incentives, but not always in predictable ways.
  • Common misconception: People always make perfectly rational decisions.
  • Suggested teaching approach:
  • Activity: Present students with different choices involving rewards and penalties.
  • Real-life connection: Why taxes, discounts, and rules shape behavior.

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💬 Discussion Starter

Ask students:

  • Why do people sometimes choose something that is not best for them long-term?
  • Can you think of a rule or reward that changed your behavior?

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🧒 Student Worksheet

Concept and Helping Material

This topic explains:

  • Choices are made by weighing costs and benefits
  • Incentives can change behavior
  • Businesses and governments often try to influence decisions

Why it matters:

  • Understanding choices helps explain consumer behavior, public policy, and unexpected outcomes.

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Vocabulary and Definitions

  • — The process of choosing between options
  • — A reward or penalty that motivates behavior
  • — The idea that people try to maximize benefits and minimize costs
  • — The study of how real people make decisions, including mistakes and emotions
  • — A rule or action by government to influence outcomes

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Samples (Examples + Short Analysis)

Sample 1 Buying snacks at checkout

Scenario: A store places candy near the register, and many customers buy it impulsively.

Analysis:

Sample 2 Smoking taxes

Scenario: The government increases taxes on cigarettes to reduce smoking.

Analysis:

Sample 3 Unexpected choice: free vs. cheap

Scenario: People often choose a free item even if a slightly better one costs only a little more.

Analysis:

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Practice Questions (QA)

1. Why do people make choices?

2. What is an incentive?

3. Why can choices be unexpected?

4. What is rational choice theory?

5. What does behavioral economics study?

6. How can businesses influence choices?

7. How can governments influence choices?

8. Why would a government want to change choices?

9. Why would businesses want to change choices?

10. What is one example of a policy affecting choices?

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Reflection

  • Describe a time an incentive changed your behavior.
  • Why is understanding choices important in economics?