EconEdLink Navigation BarStandards Contact Lessons Current Events WebLinks DataLinks CyberTeach
A premier source of classroom tested, Internet-based economic lesson materials for K-12 teachers and their students

Online Lesson

About this lesson
grade level: 6-8
EconEdLink Line Break
curriculum standards:
10 13 14

EconEdLink Line Break
author: Cross-Curricular Connections
EconEdLink Line Break
More lessons from this author
EconEdLink Line Break
posted on: October 18, 2002
EconEdLink Line Break
State Standards
EconEdLink Line Break
Printable Glossary
EconEdLink Line Break

Thinkfinity EconEdLink Banner

Teacher's Version

This lesson provides you with the resources that you will need to teach this lesson. We have also provided a link for your students to follow this lesson online. The link below contains only the information your students need:

http://econedlink.org/?a=380

EconomicsMinute

Improving on the Original

Key Economic Concepts:

Description:

What makes something worth marketing? This lesson focuses on the distinction between marketing a new product or licensing it to someone else to market.


Lesson Objectives:

Students will:

  • Distinguish between inventions and innovations.
  • Describe circumstances that have led to some famous innovations in history and brainstorm innovations that could be made to existing products.
  • Name four methods of protecting the intellectual property of a new idea.
  • Explain why someone might license an invention or innovation rather than market it themselves.

Introduction:

light bulbInventor? Innovator? Which are you? Inventors design new products and come up with innovations for old products every day. In Entreduction, you learned what inventions and innovations are. In this lesson, you will identify some famous innovations and come up with some of your own. Innovations are useful changes made to existing products. How do inventors and innovators protect the ideas they come up with? When would it make sense to market an innovation – or license it to someone else? Entrepreneurs are people who take an invention or innovation (it may even be their own!) and bring that product to market. They take all the risk of failure, but they also reaps the rewards of success. This lesson will help you learn how to protect your ideas. It could also help you start the process of deciding whether to market them yourselves or license them to someone else--an entrepreneur-- to market. Let’s get you thinking about your entrepreneurial future!

Resources:


•Common household items like coat hangers, glue, pots or pans, shoes, etc.

•“U.S. Patent and Trademark Office”: www.uspto.gov/go/kids/ [6]
This site offers a museum that can help stimulate student interest in the concept of entrepreneurship.

•“Points to Ponder”: This is a series of pages that highlight inventions and innovations in American history. These ideas can also help stimulate student interest in the concept of entrepreneurship.
www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ahrpa/opa/kids/index.html [7]

•“What is Intellectual Property?”: This site gives students the background and basic information on the four types of protections they can use to safeguard their inventions or innovations.
www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ahrpa/opa/museum/1intell.htm [8]

•Interactive Activity: Innovation Illustration
This activity allows students to work together to expand on a brainstorm of ideas. A printable version allows students to work independently or in small groups, as well as to work on additional ideas following the lesson.

•Related EconEdLink Lesson:
Entreduction
(www.econedlink.org/lessons/index.php?lesson=EM155)

Process:

Activity One:
tooth brushEntrepreneurs solve problems by coming up with new ways of doing things. Often this happens quite by accident – taking an existing product and using it to do something completely different is called innovation. Students will work with a partner to browse the stories on innovation in “Points to Ponder” and or "Twinkle Stories" from the United States Patent and Trademark Office.

"Points to Ponder" www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ahrpa/opa/kids/ponder/ponder6.htm [1]
"United States Patent and Trademark Office" www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ahrpa/opa/kids/special/twinkstory.html [2]
"Twinkle Stories"www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ahrpa/opa/kids/ [3] . The students will go to the "WhoWhatWhenHowWhy" link.

  • Which inventions or innovations strike you as the most surprising?
  • Which seem the most obvious?

Activity Two:
Have a series of common household objects available to the students. The students will pick one as a class and work with a partner to brainstorm new uses for it. The teacher will give the students a start signal to brainstorm as many new uses or innovations as they can think of in five minutes. The students will see which group can come up with the most new uses for the object in the given time period. As the students work in their groups, remind them to follow the rules of brainstorming: everything gets recorded; there are no right or wrong ideas; don’t evaluate ideas during a brainstorm – anything goes!

The students will share their lists with the rest of the class. Did any groups come up with ideas that no one else thought of? Students will use this Interactive organizer – Innovation Illustration – to work in small groups and elaborate on three of the ideas that their group came up with. The students will identify key elements that make each idea innovative, then they will fill in the chart to show what the unique features of their ideas are. They will use the space provided in the printed version to illustrate the new use their innovation provides.

Activity Three:
Now that you’ve come up with these great ideas, what next? What do entrepreneurs do to protect their ideas? Ideas are a kind of property called “intellectual property.” Just as we have laws that protect people’s physical property, we also have rules and regulations to protect intellectual property.

The students will visit the U.S.P.T.O site. In “Points to Ponder” on “Trademarks” and “The Art of Toys” they will find out what kind of intellectual property their ideas are and what they can do to keep them safe until they are ready to capitalize on them. The students will define the four types of protections they can have for a product or idea.

"Points to Ponder" on "Trademarks"
www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ahrpa/opa/kids/ponder/ponder2.htm [4]
"The Art of Toys" www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ahrpa/opa/kids/ponder/ponder3.htm [5]

  • Which of the protections makes the most sense for the innovation you’ve created?
  • How will you apply for the proper protection?

The students will visit the USPTO “WhoWhatWhenHowWhy” kids' pages to help you figure out whether they need one of the outlined protections.
"WhoWhatWhenHowWhy" www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ahrpa/opa/kids/kidprimer.html [3]

  • Which one makes the most sense to use?
  • Why?

Activity Four:
Now that they've identified their entrepreneurial side, the students will come up with an innovation, they also will learn how to protect their ideas until they are ready to do something with them – What next? Is your idea worth pursuing? Entrepreneurs take risks. Are you a risk-taker?

There are two ways you can do something profitable with your idea. You can go into business for yourself and market your idea; or, you can license it to someone else to do that for you. What will you choose?

The students will work with a partner to think through their idea. What is its real usefulness? Who will use it? In addressing these questions, the students will think about the items they read about in “Twinkle Stories.”

  • Is your innovation something that can change the way people see the original product?
  • If so, are you the person to do it, or should you try to license your idea to someone else? Either way, you may be on to something. Don’t give up!

Interactive Organizer -Innovation Illustration

The students will use this organizer to write down their own innovation and its unique qualities on paper.

Conclusion:

  • What have you decided?
  • Can you “sell” your idea to potential customers?
  • Do you think you could you convince someone else to do that for you?
  • What are some costs in trying to market your product yourself?
  • What is the potential benefit?

Assessment Activity:

Complete the following matching activity to see if you can distinguish between inventions and innovations and remember the ways of protecting your ideas.

Interactive Matching Activity

 

Links Used:

1. ^ "www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ahrpa/opa/kids/ponder/ponder6.htm" - (www.uspto.gov)
2. ^ "www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ahrpa/opa/kids/special/twinkstory.html" - (www.uspto.gov)
3. ^ ^ "www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ahrpa/opa/kids/" - (www.uspto.gov)
4. ^ "www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ahrpa/opa/kids/ponder/ponder2.htm" - (www.uspto.gov)
5. ^ "www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ahrpa/opa/kids/ponder/ponder3.htm" - (www.uspto.gov)
6. ^ "www.uspto.gov/go/kids/" - (www.uspto.gov)
7. ^ "www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ahrpa/opa/kids/index.html" - (www.uspto.gov)
8. ^ "www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ahrpa/opa/museum/1intell.htm" - (www.uspto.gov)


Teacher Reviews

June 29, 2004
I found the links in this lesson really beneficial. I plan to modify the ideas to fit my art printmaking class. It will help the students understand invention, ethics, marketing, intellectual property rights - the list seems endless. Thanks for the link to Project XL.


Insert a comment, suggestion or review of this lesson here. The comments will not appear immediately due to a time delay to allow for a review by a member of our staff.