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PARKWAY TEACHER VENTURES OUT OF
CI.ASSROOM AND INTO THE ST. LOUIS FED

FOR INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jackie Himmelberg, 314-444-8311

94-93

FOR RELEASE NOVEMBER 18, 1994
ST. LOUIS --

Bill Musick, a teacher at Parkway West High, traded in his

pointer for a pencil on Nov. 7, 1994, to attend The ABCs of Global Trade,
a free economic education workshop hosted by the Federal Reserve Bank of
St. Louis, in conjunction with the University of Missouri-St. Louis and
Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville.

At the workshop, Musick and more than 60 other Missouri and Illinois high
school teachers learned the issues behind free trade and creative ways to
explain them to their students.

The need for this type of economic education is clear.

A 1992 Gallop Poll

on American Economic Literacy found that when American high school seniors
were asked questions about fundamental economics, only 35 percent could


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ECONOMIC WORKSHOP/2

give correct answers.

Moreover, most respondents rated their knowledge of

economics as only fair or poor and overwhelmingly agreed that schools
should teach more about how the economy works.

This workshop is one in a series of instructional programs sponsored by
the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.

As part of its commitment to

economic education, the St. Louis Fed provides educators, students and the
public with programs and materials on economic issues and concepts, as
well as the role of the Federal Reserve System.

The Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis has branches in Little Rock,
Louisville and Memphis.

It serves the Eighth Federal Reserve District,

which includes all of Arkansas, eastern Missouri, western Kentucky and
Tennessee, southern Indiana and Illinois, and northern Mississippi.


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