Grades 6-8, 9-12
Concepts
This lesson has students choose a job or business to engage in during non-school hours. They then devise a strategy of whom to target and how to begin pursuit of their chosen endeavor.
Introduction
Introduce the lesson by asking your students questions about jobs: What kinds of jobs do kids do? Who pays them? What kind of job would you like to do? Discuss the Responses.
Learning Objectives
- Develop a list of child-appropriate jobs and business endeavors.
- For income derived from providing labor, providing goods, or services, determine who pays.
- Choose a business to pursue during non-school hours.
- Identifying the employers, customers, or clients to be targeted.
- Decide how to begin pursuing the respective endeavors.
Resource List
- United States Department of Labor: Youth and Labor- DOL Kids’ Pages. Provides a wealth of information on youth employment.
https://www.dol.gov/general/topic/youthlabor/kidspages - Bureau of Labor Statistics: Provides lots of great information about a wide variety of jobs and careers kids might pursue.
https://www.bls.gov/k12/ - The History Place: Child Labor in America (1908-1912), learn abou the history of child labor and child labor laws in America.
www.historyplace.com/unitedstates/childlabor/index.html - Contradiction: Kids working in a town in Colorado have sparked a controversy on child labor. Read more about it in this article.
https://www.hcn.org/issues/322/16301 - Job Planner Activity: Students will use this interactive activity to plan for a job.
Job Planner
Process
Part 1
Initiate the activity by telling the students that if they want to work after school or over the summer, there are lots of things they can do. They can sell products, provide services, work for others, volunteer, or start their own businesses. Ask them to think more specifically about the jobs they can think of that kids do. Suggest to the students that there are many possibilities, such as delivering papers and mowing lawns. Ask the students what their older brothers and sisters do to make money. Have the students take out a piece of paper and make a list of everything they can think of.
When they are finished, they should get together with their classmates and combine all their lists into a master list. Compiling a master list of ideas, accessible to all the students (on the blackboard or by other means), will give each individual student access to ideas he or she might otherwise not have thought of. The following is an extensive, though not exhaustive, list of suggestions.
NOTE: The lists compiled by the students will be age-appropriate to the students in that the students are more likely to think of jobs that they would be able to do. The teacher can then fill in the gaps to ensure that the students learn concepts in this lesson, while simultaneously allowing the class’s agenda to focus more on engaging in age-appropriate endeavors.
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Part 2
Explain to the students that in order to get a job or start a business, there has to be someone out there to hire you, or to pay you for the goods or services you are providing. These people fall into three major categories. Discuss and explain the three categories described below with the students.
Employers: An employer has a business and hires you to do work for that business. Employers pay you for your labor.
Clients: You have some sort of business in which you offer a service, and clients pay you to provide that service.
Customers: You offer to sell some sort of good, and customers buy that good from you.
Have the students take a look at the master list of jobs and businesses. Then have them answer the following questions as they relate to the jobs on the master list.
- Which jobs and businesses on the master list require employers? Customers? Clients?
- Are there any jobs or businesses on the master list that fit into more than one category? [Cage cleaning is one example of a service that could be performed for an employer (such as a kennel or veterinarian) or as a self-initiated business.]
- Are there any jobs or businesses on the master list that don’t fit well into any category? [Recycling/bottle collecting is one that may be a tough call – is the entity paying for the bottles an employer, a customer, or a client?]
Part 3
The next activity should focus on getting a job or having a successful business. Tell the students that to do this you must get connected with those who will pay you for your labor, goods, or services. Have the students answer the following questions as they relate to this concept.
- How would you get a job from an employer? [Want-ads/classifieds in the newspaper, on the Internet, etc. Also, unadvertised jobs can be created by an enterprising child (e.g., he or she can approach a local farmer and offer his/her services picking vegetables).]
- How would you find clients interested in paying you for the services your business provides? [Advertising: word of mouth, phone calls, door-to-door solicitation, flyers/postings on bulletin boards, cars, telephone poles, etc.]
- How would you find customers who want to purchase the goods you wish to sell? [Door-to-door solicitation, location (walk/drive by traffic), word of mouth, phone calls, flyers/postings on bulletin boards, cars, telephone poles, etc.]
At this point, the students should choose a job or business off the master list that most interests them. The following questions will relate solely to the job or business that each student has chosen.
- Who is the source of income for your chosen job or business (employers, clients, or customers)?
- How will you connect with them?
- Will you use more than one strategy?
In order to plan a strategy for connecting with a source of income (employers, clients, customers), the students need to know about certain words that start with the letter “A.” Will they:
- Apply for a job you they seen in the want ads?
- Ask a prospective employer to hire them for a job that was not listed?
- Advertise the services they are offering with your business, using flyers or posters, going door to door, etc.?
- Approach possible clients or customers to tell them about the goods or services they are offering?
Now the students are ready to plan they strategy. To do so, they should complete the Job Planner Activity.
[You may conduct the final activity with whatever degree of depth and formality you deem appropriate. Students who intend to advertise may wish to use art and copying supplies to create flyers or other forms of advertising. Those who will seek employment may wish to look at classified ads or identify businesses that might hire them. Those who intend to provide goods can be encouraged to flesh out the strategies they will employ in enticing customers to purchase their wares. Small group or individual attention may be required to determine each student’s optimal strategy.]
This lesson is geared towards students in the 3-5 and 6-8 grade ranges. However, with some alterations, some of the lesson activities contained herein may be adapted to suit the needs of more enterprising children in the K-2 range.
Conclusion
Make sure the students know that if they plan to get a job or start a business, they will need their parent’s permission to start working. They can tell their parents of their plan, and show them their strategy. Chances are, the parents will be very proud. Make sure the students respond to the following questions.Who will be paying for their work? Will it be an employer, a client, or a customer? Who will determine how they get paid, and how much? If they run their own business (perhaps providing a good or service to a neighbor), do they get to determine your own income? Is that an advantage? One thing the students may find from working is that money they have earned usually seems more valuable than money that was given to them!
Extension Activity
- The U.S. Department of Labor’s https://www.dol.gov/general/topic/youthlabor/kidspages provides a wealth of information on youth employment. Check the subtopics for information on newspaper delivery, rules on door-to-door sales, child labor laws, and more.
- The Bureau of Labor Statistic’s https://www.bls.gov/k12/ provides lots of great information about a wide variety of jobs and careers kids might pursue. Choose your area of interest and explore!
- Kids working in a town in Colorado have sparked a controversy on child labor. Have the students read more about it in this article . One possibility is that you could form debate teams and ask the students to debate the issues raised in this article.
- The decisions we make involve costs and benefits. As adults, people generally need to work to earn money, because money is required to buy the things we need in life. As children, it is great to earn money if you can, but school is also a responsibility, and it is important to devote adequate time to your studies. Finding the right balance is important, to ensure that you have enough time to learn as well as earn. In the past, before child labor laws, some children worked long hours, often in difficult conditions, and often at the expense of school and learning. To learn more and to see some photographs of these children and the places where they worked, visit The History Place .
NOTE: Assuming that the students actually pursue their chosen endeavors, it might be interesting to devise a long-term project, tracking their progress and, at a later date, determining whether the students succeeded in creating and developing further a successful enterprise.
Assessment
Throughout this lesson, students are producing written materials and answers to direct questions; their materials and answers can be assessed as evidence of their learning. Students are also producing advertising and employment-seeking strategies, and you may choose to judge the merits of this work, including its cogency, clarity, thoroughness, and potential for success.
Related Resources
Content Partner
Grades 3-5, 6-8
PBS-NOVA Financial Lab
Grades K-2, 3-5
Using Children’s Literature to Teach About Economics and Enterprising Women
Content Partner
Grades K-2, 3-5