speeches · October 19, 2011
Regional President Speech
Narayana Kocherlakota · President
The Importance of Teaching Teachers1
Narayana Kocherlakota
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
Minnesota Council on Economic Education
50th Anniversary
Minneapolis, Minnesota
October 20, 2011
1 I thank Doug Clement, David Fettig, Dick Todd and Jenni Schoppers for their helpful thoughts and comments.
1
Let me begin by welcoming all of you to the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis to celebrate
this auspicious event—the 50th anniversary celebration of the Minnesota Council on Economic
Education (MCEE). Congratulations to all of you, including you teachers who have been a part of
the Minnesota Council’s programs over the years, but especially to Claudia Parliament, who has
served as director for nearly 20 of those 50 years, and who has done so with absolute
commitment and professionalism. Indeed, it is hard to imagine the Minnesota Council without
Claudia, but I understand that she will soon be leaving her post and handing her baton to her
successor. Claudia, we thank you for your service and we wish you the best.
We are truly honored to host this event and are pleased that so many of you could
make it here this evening. The Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis has long been a partner of
the Minnesota Council in its efforts to aid teachers in the often challenging task of teaching
economics. I call economic education a “challenging task” not just to make all of you feel
special, but because we at the Federal Reserve know those challenges well. We face them, too;
namely, how to explain often complicated ideas in a clear and concise manner. The Federal
Open Market Committee, under the leadership of Chairman Ben Bernanke, has made
communication a top goal, and as I will describe in a moment, I am on record as strongly
supporting this initiative. In many respects, communication is another word for education. The
better we communicate, the more we educate about the Federal Reserve’s responsibilities and
its actions. And before I begin, I should remind you that my comments here tonight reflect my
views alone, and not necessarily those of others in the Federal Reserve System, including my
FOMC colleagues.
2
So speaking with teachers and the MCEE is especially rewarding to me, because you are
the unsung but vital allies in the Federal Reserve System’s efforts to communicate about policy.
Effective policy implementation requires public support and, therefore, public understanding.
Public understanding of policy decisions, in turn, requires clear communication between
policymakers and the public. In my view, the bulk of the responsibility for clear communication
falls on policymakers themselves. With this in mind, I have strongly supported Federal Reserve
System initiatives toward greater transparency about our decisions and the logic behind them.
In my speeches, articles and video statements on our website—as well as via the Bank’s Twitter
and YouTube channels, its Facebook page and its smartphone delivery system—I try to clearly
outline my own thinking about policy.
Now, although policymakers have the primary responsibility for effectively
communicating their decisions, the task becomes easier when the general public has a basic
grasp of economic and financial principles. In my frequent dialogues with audiences in the
Ninth Federal Reserve District, I am often impressed by their interest in and understanding of
policy issues. Their perceptiveness bolsters my belief in the importance and possibility of clear
communication about policy. Everyone benefits from a better public understanding of basic
economic concepts. It helps policymakers in their efforts to successfully convey policy decisions,
and it allows voters to more effectively hold policymakers accountable.
These benefits should not be taken for granted, however. They are the result of an
effective system of general education that relies on elementary, secondary and college teachers
to provide training in economics, personal finance and related social sciences. With that in
3
mind, I want to express my sincere appreciation not only to the instructors who teach these
concepts, but especially, in the context of MCEE’s 50th anniversary, to those who support and
prepare them to teach.
More broad than deep
The objective of general economic and personal finance education is more broad than deep. In
particular, it need not aim at preparing students to be professional economists, even though
some of them will follow that path. I know this from experience. Despite having little exposure
to economics instruction until I was a college undergraduate, I was not disadvantaged in my
subsequent pursuit of an economics Ph.D. It remains the case that many successful professional
economists and current economics graduate students had little formal training in economics
before college or, in some cases, graduate school. In other words, the primary aim of K‐12
education in economics and finance is to prepare students to be thoughtful individuals, good
citizens and intelligent workers, but not necessarily economists.
These aims can be largely met by successfully conveying a small set of basic economic
and finance concepts. We economists are notorious for our arguments and disagreements, of
course, but the fact is we generally agree on the basic concepts that underlie economic
reasoning. Fortunately, economists and economic educators have already translated these core
concepts into standards for K‐12 instruction, including the Voluntary National Content
4
Standards in Economics from the MCEE’s national partner, the Council for Economic Education2
and the Minnesota Department of Education’s proposed new social studies standards.3
So the good news is that these concepts and more have already been written into
proposed or actual standards for K‐12 social science education, and there are additional
proposed and actual standards in personal finance. In other words, appropriate specific
objectives for K‐12 economic and personal finance education are pretty well understood.
The challenge, however, is to meet those objectives. Although parents and other
mentors and nonschool experiences play an important role, especially in personal finance
learning, effective K‐12 teaching is critical to achieving a broad base of public understanding of
basic economic and finance concepts. The mission of the MCEE and its sister organizations
stems from the idea that effective teaching is based on good material and a well‐prepared
instructor.
The MCEE has long provided a full range of materials organized to help teachers teach
to standards, including full curricula and lesson plans from the Council for Economic Education,
other state councils on economic education and organizations such as Junior Achievement and
the National Endowment for Financial Education. On its own, the MCEE has taken a leading role
in delivering materials and hosting student competitions for the Cargill Global Food Challenge, a
curriculum that teaches students how supply and demand factors interact to determine
equilibrium prices and quantities in a global market while also covering policy issues related to
2 Online at http://www.councilforeconed.org/ea/program.php?pid=19
3 Online at
http://www.education.state.mn.us/MDE/Academic_Excellence/Academic_Standards/Social_Studies/index.html
5
agriculture, trade and food security. The widely used Seas, Trees, and Economies environmental
economics curriculum was developed by Curt Anderson, director of the MCEE’s center at the
University of Minnesota Duluth. Anderson and the MCEE are also in the process of
disseminating a new set of personal finance materials. For classroom teachers developing their
own materials, the MCEE provides workshops and mentoring as well as awards for outstanding
new lesson plans in economics and personal finance, funded by 3M and Thrivent, respectively.
Of course, one of the reasons we are here tonight is to witness the presentation of those
awards, which will occur shortly.
Preparing teachers
Teaching materials are important, but only if they are taught, and especially if they are taught
by a well‐trained teacher. Ideally, all teachers would be trained in the content and pedagogy of
their subject areas in their undergraduate or graduate courses, but the reality is that many K‐12
teachers teach subjects they did not study extensively in college. When the subject is
economics or personal finance, a common reaction is panic, often followed by a call for help to
the MCEE or a similar organization. To meet the needs of both new and experienced teachers at
all grade levels, the MCEE offers an array of courses, ranging from Using Children’s Literature to
Teach Economics and Personal Finance to Enhancing the Social Studies Curriculum with
Economics and Preparing to Teach High School Economics.
Scott Wolla’s story illustrates that the results can be impressive. Wolla became a social
studies teacher at Hibbing (Minn.) High School in 1996. When the opportunity to teach
economics opened in 2001, Wolla volunteered, but soon decided he needed help, despite
6
having a degree in social studies education. Like many others in this situation, he turned to the
MCEE for instruction on suitable materials and lessons plans. Before long, he was not only
confident, but proficient. Wolla coached his students to the national championships in the
Council for Economic Education’s Economics Challenge competition three times, culminating in
a national championship in 2006; his students have also won the Cargill Global Food Challenge.
Wolla went on to develop his own lessons plans, winning the MCEE’s 3M Innovative
Economic Educator Award in 2003. In 2006, he was named Minnesota’s high school social
studies teacher of the year and won MCEE’s 3M Economic Educator Excellence award for career
achievement. Along the way, Wolla completed a master’s degree in economics for educators.
He now serves as one of my colleagues, as an economic education specialist at the Federal
Reserve Bank of St. Louis.
The transition from panic to proficiency taken by Wolla has been repeated by many
others. As those of you who attend EconFest regularly already know, a number of Wolla’s
fellow recipients of the MCEE’s 3M and Thrivent Innovative Educator awards have related
similar tales. But the case is backed up by research as well as anecdotes.
A recent study by Wendy Way and Karen Holden of the University of Wisconsin
documents a gap in readiness to teach personal finance among K‐12 educators from across the
country.4 Almost 90 percent of the K‐12 teachers who responded to Way and Holden’s survey
expressed moderate to strong agreement with the idea that “students should be required to
4 Way, Wendy L., and Karen C. Holden. 2009. “Teachers’ Background and Capacity to Teach Personal Finance:
Results of a National Study.” Journal of Financial Counseling and Planning 20 (2).
7
take a financial literacy course or pass a literacy test for high school graduation,” and about 30
percent had actually taught financial literacy concepts (usually integrated into a course on
another or broader topic). Nonetheless, the respondents reported a large gap in knowledge
about how to teach personal finance. Only 3 percent of K‐12 teachers had taken a college
course that covered how to teach personal finance, and just 7 percent to 11 percent felt well
qualified in areas such as integrating financial literacy concepts into their disciplines, developing
examples to explain financial literacy concepts and assessing students’ financial literacy
understanding. These findings corroborate the anecdotes of panic that lead many new teachers
of economics and personal finance to seek out the MCEE and its affiliates.
Proficient students
Research also supports the anecdotes of student proficiency achieved through teacher training
on economics and personal finance pedagogy. Two scholars associated with the MCEE’s center
at St. Cloud State University, Rich MacDonald and Ken Rebeck, teamed with the University of
Nebraska’s William Walstad to assess how much a well‐prepared teacher using a well‐designed
curriculum could enhance students’ acquisition of personal finance knowledge.5 They worked
with 15 teachers in four states who were trained to use the Council for Economic Education’s
Financing Your Future curriculum.
After being trained, these teachers used the curriculum to instruct hundreds of
students. Those students and a control group of similar students who received no instruction
were tested both before and after the instruction, and the results were clear. Before instruction
5 Walstad, William B., Ken Rebeck and Rich MacDonald. 2010. “The Effects of Financial Education on the
Financial Knowledge of High School Students.” Journal of Consumer Affairs 44 (2).
8
began, both groups of students correctly answered just under 50 percent of the test questions.
Afterward, performance was unchanged for the control group, but rose to almost 69 percent
correct for the students receiving instruction, a statistically significant improvement.
In short, well‐trained teachers using sound curricula make a difference. That logic lies
behind the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis’ long partnership with the MCEE, the Montana
Council on Economic Education and other economic and personal finance education
organizations. Our senior officers and economists have worked with the MCEE and others since
at least the 1960s. We value the opportunities the MCEE provides for talking with K‐12
educators about macroeconomics, monetary policy, financial supervision and the role of the
Federal Reserve System, and their help in publicizing and building participation for our annual
economic essay contest. And each April we are honored—and honestly, get a huge kick out of—
hosting teams from across Minnesota in the final rounds of the MCEE’s two state high school
quiz‐bowl‐like championships, the Economics Challenge and the Personal Finance Decathlon.
So, on behalf of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, let me thank all of those who
teach economics and personal finance as well as all those who support, prepare and train them,
with a special nod to our long‐term partner, the Minnesota Council on Economic Education, on
the occasion of its 50th anniversary celebration this October. Let’s keep working together to
prepare students to be thoughtful individuals, good citizens, intelligent workers and,
sometimes, teachers and economists.
9
Cite this document
APA
Narayana Kocherlakota (2011, October 19). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20111020_narayana_kocherlakota
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20111020_narayana_kocherlakota,
author = {Narayana Kocherlakota},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2011},
month = {Oct},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20111020_narayana_kocherlakota},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}