miércoles, 17 de marzo de 2021

Lá Fhéile Pádraig-Día de San Patricio IES ISAAC PERAL -Cartagena-

 El  —o simplemente San Patricio— (en irlandésLá Fhéile Pádraig) es una festividad de origen cristiano que se celebra anualmente el 17 de marzo para conmemorar la muerte de san Patricio de Irlandapatrón de toda la isla de Irlanda ubicada al noroeste de la Europa continental. Es una fiesta nacional en la República de Irlanda y se celebra junto al día nacional de la fundación de la República, además el brazo fuerte de la celebración se debe a la gran presencia católica en la isla; en la nación constituyente británica de Irlanda del Norte la fiesta es más que todo costumbrista, pues a pesar de ser de mayoría protestante durante la unión de la isla en el histórico señorío y posterior reino constituyente anglo-irlandés la cultura católica del sur predominó sobre la protestante del norte. Desde los últimos años del siglo xx se celebra a nivel mundial debido a la extensa diáspora irlandesa en países como Francia y España e incluso en lugares alejados de Europa como Estados Unidos  y Canadá.





domingo, 14 de marzo de 2021

IAEE "CROWDFUNDING" IES ISAAC PERAL -Cartagena-



 









¿Qué es el crowdfunding?

El crowdfunding o micromecenazgo, en castellano, es una forma de financiación que consiste en emplear el capital que han proporcionado numerosos inversores a través de pequeñas aportaciones. Normalmente, todo el proceso se hace online mediante plataformas especializadas.

Dependiendo del tipo de recompensa que reciben los inversores existen diferentes modelos, en los que no influye el tipo de proyecto que vaya a ser financiado. Veamos, a continuación, los diferentes tipos de crowdfunding que nos podemos encontrar y a qué tipo de impuestos responde cada uno.





















miércoles, 20 de febrero de 2019

unidad didáctica AICLE



Template to design a CLIL didactic unit

Subject: ECONOMY                                                           Teacher: Angélica Robles Pastor

Title of the Unit
“   Economics focuses on the behavior of agents”                                              


 Course / Level         ELEVENTH GRADE

1. Learning outcomes
 / Evaluation criteria
-To know the analysis basic elements including individual agents, their interactions, such as outcomes and incomes.
-To investigate how organizations succeed at corporate entrepreneurship avoid high costs focusing on the behavior of agents.
-To designated an organization creating new resources which can be applied throughout agents of the society.
-To distinguish the different behavior of agents in the actually world and their different dimensions.
2. Subject Content
-Principal concept of the economy and the main agents what are interacting.
-Principal concepts including demandmarginalismrational choice theory and opportunity cost.
-Characteristics of experimental economics and the use of scientifically controlled experiments by agents.
3. Language Content / Communication
Vocabulary

-Noums:


-Verbs:
To administer, to confirm, to support, to advertise, to declare, to insure, to product, to benefit, to need, to require, to buy, to import, to depend on, to sell, to trade in, to obtain, to control, to increase, to export, to earn,  to organize and to gain.
-Adjetives:
Frequently tested empirically, cheap, economic, competitive, lucrative, profitable, cost-effective, economical, fiscal, ailing, and aggregate.


Structures


Understanding the economy requires a basic knowledge of the key flows that influence economic activity. How do interest rates affect households and businesses? How does government policy influence GDP? Forming a view on these and many other policy questions requires some knowledge of the economy’s structure.
·         Macroecomics
·         Microeconomics
·         Indicators of economic structure
·         Total person income

Discourse type
Language skills
  • Abstract and simplify in order to identify and model the essence of a problem.
  • Analyse and reason – both deductively and inductively evidence and to assimilate the structure.
  • Analyse qualitative and quantitative data.
  • Communicate concisely results to a wide audience.
  • Think critically about the limits and to analyse in a socio-economic context.
  • Draw economic policy inferences and to recognize the potential constraints in their implementation.
  • Apply literary and information-processing skills, as well as interpersonal skills.
4. Contextual (cultural) element
Past and present cultural elements. Cultural economics develops from how wants and tastes are formed in society.
5. Cognitive (thinking) processes
  • Traditional economics: data on naturally occurring market choices and time allocations only
  • Experimental economics: data on choices in artificial situations with real stakes
    • Field experiments
    • Laboratory experiments
  • Neuroeconomics: data from brain imaging and other ways of measuring brain activity, data on eyeball orientation and data on other physiological measures, such as skin conductance, muscle activation or hormone levels
  • Genoeconomics: data on genes
  • Cognitive economics: data on hypothetical choices, psychometric data, and self-report data on mental contents
6. (a) Task(s)
    • Survey measures of expectations
    • Survey measures of preference parameters
    • Direct measures of intelligence
    • Direct measures of decision-making skill
    • Self-reported emotions, including self-reported happiness
    • Survey measures of beliefs about how the world works.
6. (b) Activities
Imagine a bathtub full of water, where the water level represents the level of employment or economic activity.
There are two drains on the bathtub: taxes and savings. The government collects taxes and then uses it to fund a lot of other activities like health, education, justice, social welfare, etc. The government can control how much it spends through its annual Budget.

Savings are invested either by households or by businesses. So we could put our savings towards a house, or we could it put in the bank. The bank would then lend it to businesses to invest.
That comes back to the economy.
7. Methodology
Organization and class distribution / timing
22 people , 10 girls and 12 boys.
People used to be sitting in a group of four or five people.
Resources / Materials
Text Book.
Homework book.
Digital resources.
APP live 360º.
QR CODE.
Movil telephone.
Key Competences

             What is open government in practice?  

             What do we get when we open the government?  

             How to get an open government?  

             Open government and technology  
              Right to digital skills  

             Digital social inclusion or exclusion?  

             Internet as a human right?  

           
8. Evaluation (criteria and instruments)
Transferable skills, including: communication and presenting findings and explaining complex data, numeracy handling complex data and applying mathematical and statistical analysis methods. problem solving extracting information, drawing conclusions and making recommendations.