
Lean Canvas and Business Structures
An examination of the Lean Canvas model to map out business strategies efficiently. Students also review legal structures suitable for Australian startups.
TL;DR:Economic growth is a primary objective of the Australian government, usually measured by the annual percentage change in real Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Students explore the factors that drive growth, such as technological change, labour force participation, and investment in infrastructure. They also examine the business cycle, identifying the characteristics of booms, recessions, troughs, and peaks.
About This Topic
Economic growth is a primary objective of the Australian government, usually measured by the annual percentage change in real Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Students explore the factors that drive growth, such as technological change, labour force participation, and investment in infrastructure. They also examine the business cycle, identifying the characteristics of booms, recessions, troughs, and peaks.
This topic encourages students to look beyond the numbers and consider the quality of growth. They evaluate the benefits, such as higher living standards, alongside the costs, such as environmental degradation and increased inequality. Students grasp this concept faster through structured discussion and peer explanation of how different phases of the cycle affect everyday Australians.
Key Questions
- How does the Lean Canvas differ from a traditional business plan?
- What are the key components of a viable business model?
- Which legal structure is best for a new Australian enterprise?
Watch Out for These Misconceptions
Common MisconceptionEconomic growth always makes everyone better off.
What to Teach Instead
Growth can be uneven, leading to increased wealth gaps or environmental damage. Using a 'Gallery Walk' of different Australian communities (e.g., a mining town vs. a drought-affected farming area) helps students see that growth impacts vary significantly.
Common MisconceptionA recession is just when the economy slows down.
What to Teach Instead
In Australia, a technical recession is defined as two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth. Peer-teaching exercises where students have to 'diagnose' an economy based on quarterly data help clarify this specific definition.
Active Learning Ideas
See all activities→Stations Rotation
Phases of the Business Cycle
Set up four stations representing Boom, Recession, Trough, and Upswing. At each station, students must list the likely levels of unemployment, inflation, and consumer confidence, using recent Australian historical data as evidence.
Formal Debate
Is GDP a Good Measure of Progress?
Students debate the limitations of GDP. One side defends GDP as a standard metric, while the other argues for alternative measures like the Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI) or the OECD Better Life Index, specifically referencing Australian social and environmental outcomes.
Inquiry Circle
Australia's Growth Drivers
Groups are assigned a specific decade in Australian history (e.g., the 2000s mining boom). They must identify the key drivers of growth during that period and present a 'digital scrapbook' of the era's economic performance.
Frequently Asked Questions
How is economic growth measured in Australia?
What is the difference between a boom and an upswing?
How can active learning help students understand the business cycle?
Why does the government want 'sustainable' economic growth?
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