Business Law: Publisher Project
Points 100
Content Standard: Students will analyze and describe the elements of a contract.
Objective: Students will create a newsletter with four parts to explain the elements of a contract, describe the requirements of an offer, dialogue between an offeror and an offeree, describing how an offer may be ended
Also, you will be answering 2 under the surface critical thinking questions in paragraph form
Language objective: explain and write about the before mentioned topics in written, typed language
Common Core standard: CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RH.6-8.3
Identify key steps in a text's description of a process related to history/social studies
Instructions:
1. Open Microsoft office, choose a “blank publication”
2.Choose a newsletter, and a template
3.On the template include the following right away
- Name of your newsletter
- Name date period somewhere where it can be easily found
- Cut or erase any unneeded parts
4.Section 1: title: Six requirements of a contract
- List and describe all six elements required for the courts to treat this transaction as a contract
- Explain how your offeror and offeree completed one of the step (which step?)
5.Section 2: title: Requirements of an offer
- List and describe the 3 elements of a legal offer
6.Section 3: title “An offer”
- Create a 20 line dialogue between an offeror and offeree
- An offer must be made and accepted about a purchase of some kind
- Include all elements of an offer. See the example to help you get started
- Offeror: hey want to buy something
- Offeree: what is it I only have $100 dollars
7.Section 4: title: ending an offer
- Describe all the ways that an offer can be ended and by whom It can be ended
8.Section 5: Title: thinking critically
- Copy then answer in a paragraph both of the following questions.
- The owner of a small color television set offers to sell it to a neighbor for $75. As the neighbor stands there thinking about the offer, a bystander says, “That’s a bargain. I’ll take it!” Is there a contract between the bystander and the owner or the neighbor and the owner or neither? Why?
- Frank saw a motorized wheelchair advertised in the paper. When he called, it was described to him and he drove out to see it. The seller was asking $900 for it, but it needed work. So Frank offered $700. The seller said she wasn’t interested at that price. Later, Frank called and accepted the offer at the $900 price. However, the seller said it had been sold. Frank became upset and sued. Will the seller be liable? Why or why not?