There was no problem with students making the cookies at home. Guess we're 
lucky here in Maine. One year they designed ice cream but that was years ago 
and much smaller numbers. Once I had them create any project of their choice, 
and once they created a toy or game. Cookies went over best. One young man took 
Oreos and covered them in white chocolate and sprinkles for his cookie. This 
was the first year? I had a young man win. I had a run off among the top seller 
in each of the four classes. This was judged by the assistant principal and two 
other teachers. He created an ice cream sandwich cookie!
Linda in ME


 


"For whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved." Romans 
10:13 

 


 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [email protected]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wed, 25 Jul 2007 10:10 pm
Subject: Re: [LIT] Lessons to share...










Linda wrote:


In order to cover propaganda techniques, research, and media, I created 
the "Cookie Selling Lesson". Students study propaganda techniques in print 
advertising, TV, and radio. They then create a cookie and name it based upon 
market research of their class. They create a print ad, a radio ad, and a TV ad 
for it. They present these to the class, and (here's the part the kids love) 
they sell it. The kids actually make the cookies. Each student gets 5 "Haskell" 
dollars to spend. Each cookie costs a dollar. The other students select the 
cookie by the ads. The cookies themselves are hidden away in containers. Once 
purchased, they receive and can eat the cookie. Each student keeps tack of how 
many they have sold and each student fills out a survey slip about whether they 
would be a repeat buyer or not. 

Pam writes:
I gotta ask, what is your district or school's policy about kids making food 
and 
bringing it into school??Or did you take over the home ec. room and have the 
kids bake??My district won't allow any home made items to be brought in & with 
money such a concern in my school, I don't think I'd get too good of 
participation if I had the kids bring in store bought.

Having said all that, I LOVE this idea.?How well do you think it would go over 
if we did it all except make & eat the cookies??They could still spend $5 
cougar 
paws on the cookies' ads that most appeal to them.?(I know that most middle 
school kids would mug their granny for food, so kinda a bummer.?Unless I can 
swap rooms with the home ec teacher for the day...hmmm....).

Pam/6th Gr./FL
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