
Business • Year 12 • 40 • Created with AI following Aligned with Common Core State Standards
Subject: Business
Grade Level: Year 12 (Equivalent to Grade 12, Age 17–18)
Length: 40 minutes
Standards Alignment:
Aligned with the U.S. National Business Education Association (NBEA) Standards in the following areas:
By the end of this lesson, students will be able to:
Activity Title: "Too Good To Be True?"
Mini-Lecture & Discussion: Common Types of Scams
Using a short presentation (3–5 slides maximum visual), go over:
🎯 Tip: Connect each type of scam to a real-world example reported in U.S. media or by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).
Interactive Component: Pose the question: “Which of these scams would you be most likely to fall for, and why?” Allow 1–2 student responses to encourage vulnerability and open discussion.
Concept: Emotional Triggers & Urgency
Present key psychological tactics used by scammers:
Activity: Scam Anatomy Game (Think-Pair-Share)
3 minutes to pair-share, followed by 2 minutes class discussion.
Critical Discussion: How Can We Protect Ourselves?
Break into four small groups (6–7 students per group). Assign each group one of the following:
Each group develops a quick “Safety Checklist” with 3 bullet points.
One speaker per group shares their list with the class (1-minute each max).
Teacher Note: This ties directly into NBEA’s emphasis on financial literacy and security.
Activity: Scam Busters PSA (Public Service Announcement)
Individually, students will imagine they’ve been asked to create a 30-second radio announcement to warn peers about scams. Instruct them to write 3–4 impactful lines including:
Teacher Collects: These act as formative assessment for objective comprehension. Optionally, 2–3 students may perform theirs.
Quick class poll:
“On a scale of 1–5, how prepared do you feel to avoid scams now?”
Ask students to raise fingers 1–5 and reflect on continued learning.
Suggestion:
Students interview a family member or neighbor (age 40+) about whether they’ve ever been contacted by a scammer and what they did. Write a 100-word reflection summarizing:
This lesson addresses a real-world issue with immediate relevance to seniors preparing for independence. By mixing high-impact content, interaction, and creativity, students learn not only to protect themselves, but to educate others – a true hallmark of financial and civic literacy in the digital era.
Let’s keep their wallets — and their trust — secure.
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