Jelly Belly Jam

Introduction:

Decisions, decisions, decisions! How can anyone make all the decisions we have today! M&M's, Jelly Belly beans, and Star bursts all sound good! This lesson will show you a way to help with those little decisions!

Task:

You will define a problem, list two choices, evaluate the choices, identify what you gave up when you made that choice, and make a decision using a decision chart.

Process:

The following is an interactive story about a bear named Nathan. It is Nathan's birthday and he needs to make some important decisions. It is your job to help him make those decisions. Read the following story: Sweet Jelly Belly Beans

Jelly Belly web site. Check out the different flavors and remember to click on What's New to find out all the brand new flavors.

Let's review some of our basic economics:

Now, let's get back to our story: Sweet Jelly Belly Beans Part II

Conclusion:

Since a bag of Jelly Belly beans cost almost all of the $15, Nathan couldn't buy a mixture of those two flavors. He had to make a decision. The cost of that decision was his OPPORTUNITY COST - that's the one thing he gave up to buy Chocolate Cherry Cake flavor. What flavor did Nathan give up?

Assessment Activity:

Pretend you have $15 to spend on Jelly Belly beans. Go to the Jelly Belly web site and fill out a Decision chart just like Nathan. Which flavor would you choose? What was your opportunity cost?

Extension Activity:

Groovy Candies is a website that offers a lot of choices of candies.