Students should continue developing their cost-benefit skills and recognize the importance of education in developing their human capital. Students learn to identify some issues that are important in their immediate community and may engage in an inquiry project or service-learning project related to one of these issues, in response to the question, What issues are important to my community? Informed volunteers in community service or elected officials can be invited to describe some of the arguments on different sides of an important issue facing the community. Children’s literature such as Almost Zero by Nikki Grimes, A Chair for My Mother by Vera Williams, When Bees Fly Home by Andrea Cheng, and A Day’s Work by Eve Bunting as well as informational books are valuable resources for introducing and developing economic concepts.