
Journalist and podcaster Stacey Vanek Smith shares how a love of storytelling and curiosity about the world led her to a career translating economic trends into engaging narratives. From public radio to Bloomberg Businessweek, she has built a reputation for making complex ideas accessible. In a conversation with St. Louis Fed Economic Education Officer Scott Wolla, Vanek Smith explains how connecting economics to everyday experiences can help students grasp difficult concepts.
May 20
39 min

Harvard University economist John Y. Campbell and Imperial College London economist Tarun Ramadorai were both drawn to the field's blend of history, human behavior and analytical rigor. Together, they wrote the book Fixed, in which they make the case that economic education is a key part of helping consumers navigate a diverse landscape of financial products. Speaking with St. Louis Fed Economic Education Officer Scott Wolla, Campbell and Ramadorai also discuss practical ways teachers can help students better understand markets, incentives and consumer choices.
Apr 15
40 min

When designing an economics class, sometimes the best approach is to start in reverse. In this episode, University of Nebraska-Lincoln professor Sam Allgood discusses the power of "backward design." It's a technique that encourages educators to first think about what they want students to master by the end of a course before developing individual lesson plans. Allgood also discusses with St. Louis Fed Economic Education Officer Scott Wolla the value of having a growth mindset in the classroom and how AI can be used to create individualized learning content.
Feb 19
37 min

David Autor, MIT's Daniel and Gail Rubinfeld professor of economics, is a leading thinker and researcher on how AI could reshape the labor market. While he says AI could revolutionize how we work, it won't replace human intuition. In this episode, Autor joins St. Louis Fed Economic Education Officer Scott Wolla and explains how he challenges students to use technology as a collaborator, not a crutch. He also discusses his approach for pushing students to focus on how economics can solve real-world problems.
Dec 9, 2025
51 min

Could brain science help unlock students' understanding of complex economic topics? In this episode, St. Louis Fed Economic Education Officer Scott Wolla explores that question with educator and author Patrice Bain. Bain spent years working with cognitive scientists to better understand how people learn and wrote about her findings in her book "Powerful Teaching." She shares her four "power tools" for learning and how they can be applied to economic education.
Oct 30, 2025
33 min

In this episode, University of Chicago professor John List shares his unique approach to teaching economics. Unlike traditional methods, List begins by exploring real-world questions that intrigue his students, using their interests to frame lessons on economic principles. He talks with St. Louis Fed Economic Education Officer Scott Wolla about how his own curiosity and experiences as a baseball card collector led him to economics. List also explains how he aims to inspire the same curiosity in his students, using field experiments and behavioral economics to help them better understand and apply complex economic concepts in their lives. His innovative teaching methods have made his course a hit at the University of Chicago, demonstrating the power of economic thinking in everyday life.
Aug 21, 2025
32 min

Tulane University professor Gary Hoover shares how his personal journey to the field of economics shaped his teaching philosophy. Hoover also reflects on the mentors who changed his life, the importance of making economics real and relevant, and the responsibility educators have to meet students where they are. "Hoov," as he's known, talks with St. Louis Fed Economic Education Officer Scott Wolla about how economics isn't just about markets—it's about people—and how great teaching means equipping students with tools to answer their own questions.
Jul 1, 2025
32 min

Wendy Stock, a professor of economics at Montana State University, doesn't begin the first day of the semester reviewing a syllabus with her students. Rather, she asks them what topics in the world are the most important to them. Stock then uses their answers to frame lessons about how economics can help them better understand what they feel most affects their lives. In this episode, Stock talks with St. Louis Fed Economic Education Officer Scott Wolla about how her own curiosity led her to economics and how she hopes harnessing her students' curiosity will help them better grasp complicated topics.
Apr 16, 2025
39 min

Let's say you're writing a syllabus for the only economics class a student might ever take. What would you teach? That's the question on the mind of Avi Cohen, a professor of economics at York University in Toronto, Canada. For Cohen, the answer lies in the literacy-targeted approach to teaching, which argues that it is more valuable for students to be able to apply core economic concepts well than to be exposed to a wide range of concepts they may soon forget. In this episode, Cohen explains to St. Louis Fed Economic Education Officer Scott Wolla how this approach can help all students, even those who go on to pursue a career in economics.
Mar 13, 2025
31 min

In the latest episode of our Teach Economics podcast, Annamaria Lusardi, faculty director of the Initiative for Financial Decision-Making at Stanford University, talks about her career journey and passion for teaching personal finance education. "When the tooth fairy comes is the time to talk about money," she says. "Give a piggy bank to a child and you will instantly turn (the child) into a clever banker. I enjoy empowering people with the knowledge and skills that are so important today. I really do think I am empowering the student to be able to navigate the world around them."
Nov 4, 2024
34 min
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