Mar 20, 2023

Edpuzzle: Where Have All The Servers Gone?

Can restaurants survive the changing labor market? Learn what goes in to the price of dining out.

We know many industries were hit hard during "The Great Resignation," but the restaurant industry was dealt a particularly bad blow. This video from TwoCents titled "Where Have All The Servers Gone?" details many of the factors that have contributed to the disproportionate struggles in the food service industry and looks at some of the many ways restaurant owners and workers are responding to the changing labor market.

 

 

Interested in more Edpuzzle videos? Visit our Video Library and type in "Edpuzzle" into the search bar at the top to view the rest of our Edpuzzle videos!

 

Note: You do NOT need to create an account to ACCESS Edpuzzle videos. But if you do create free teacher and student accounts, you will then be able to capture and save student responses. For more tips and tricks on how to best implement these videos in your classroom, check out Amanda Volz's Tech Tip video. If you would like more information, visit the Edpuzzle Teacher Support page!

 

--------------

Looking for an activity on factors in the labor market? Check out ECON: Help Wanted! Find this and more great activities in the NEW NGPF Econ Directory!

About the Author

Dan Rolando

Always enamored with learning, Dan’s parents affectionately nicknamed him “The Sponge” as a kid. After earning his Engineering Master’s from NC State University followed by six years of teaching, Dan joins NGPF to pursue his passion of inspiring financial capability in anyone who will listen. Having navigated seven years of higher education debt-free through scholarships, work, creative budgeting, and a whole lot of help, he recognizes the freedom that comes from financial independence and hopes to share that gift with others. In the (rare) times he’s not discussing finance, Dan enjoys running, reading, playing board games, spending time with his daughter, and being sous chef for his wife.

Mail Icon

Subscribe to the blog

Join the more than 11,000 teachers who get the NGPF daily blog delivered to their inbox: