High School Financial Literacy Curriculum (2024)

Remote Learning:
FoolProof's Free Financial Literacy Curriculum for High Schools

Financial Literacy and a Lot, Lot More...

We Offer a Free, Turnkey and Ethically-Driven Consumer Life Skills Program

In an upside down world we teach kids the power of healthy skepticism, caution, character and calmness.

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High School Financial Literacy Curriculum (1)

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High School Financial Literacy Curriculum (2)


FoolProof is all about becoming a "Healthy Skeptic."

Background:

The staggering amount of time kids spend on digital devices makes them particularly vulnerable to marketers.

FoolProof's Financial Literacy Curriculum provides a powerful antidote. It empowers kids at a critical time in their development by teaching healthy skepticism.

Kids who use the Curriculum will be better equipped to avoid scams, resist impulse buying and recognizing manipulative marketing techniques.

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FoolProof's remote high school curriculum is already used in over 8,000 schools.
Students made 43.5 million pages views in the 2018-19 school year.

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The Solution:

Out-of-school children are now faced with building decision-making habits that will impact the quality of their lives.

Marketers are hard at work trying to shape many of those habits.

The FoolProof Foundation has developed a consumer life skills curriculum to help teachers and mentors instill habits in children which may counter some of the marketing industry's efforts.

Consumer advocates, teachers and students—not marketers—developed our curriculum.


More Than Money Lessons

The FoolProof curriculum goes beyond traditional financial literacy.

We immerse high-school students in the importance of developing three core habits:

Healthy skepticism
Trustworthiness
Personal responsibility


Educational Standards

The FoolProof Curriculum meets most state and national financial literacy guidelines and standards, including integration of Common Core requirements and is listed as a resource by the Jump$tart Financial Coalition.

We give you a rigorous, full semester curriculum. You can use one topic or all.

High School Financial Literacy Curriculum (3)

  • Alabama
  • Alaska
  • Arizona
  • Arkansas
  • California
  • Colorado
  • Connecticut
  • Delaware
  • District of Columbia
  • Florida - Personal Finance
  • Florida - Economics classes - dual enrollment
  • Georgia
  • Hawaii
  • Idaho
  • Illinois
  • Indiana
  • Iowa - Personal Finance
  • Iowa - Social Studies
  • Kansas Personal Finance Standards
  • Kentucky
  • Louisiana
  • Maine
  • Maryland
  • Massachusetts
  • Michigan
  • Minnesota
  • Mississippi
  • Missouri
  • Montana
  • Nebraska
  • Nevada
  • New Hampshire
  • New Jersey
  • New Mexico
  • New York - Twelfth Grade Economics, the Enterprise System, and Finance
  • New York
  • North Carolina
  • North Dakota
  • Ohio - High school
  • Oklahoma
  • Oregon
  • Pennsylvania
  • Rhode Island
  • South Carolina
  • South Dakota
  • Tennessee
  • Texas
  • Utah
  • Vermont
  • Virginia
  • Washington
  • West Virginia
  • Wisconsin
  • Wyoming
  • Common Core State Standards
  • The Jump$tart Coalition
  • National Business Education Association
  • National Council for Social Studies
  • The Council for Economic Education
  • National Council of Teachers of Mathematics

FoolProof's High School Curriculum Is Peer-to-Peer and Engaging

Our Curriculum Is:

  • Free.
  • Web-driven & self-grading.
  • Advertising-free and contains no hidden agenda.
  • "21st Century Learning" compatible.
  • It features videos, highly interactive conversations, animation and text.
  • It's labor-saving and virtually turnkey for teachers and mentors.
  • Students literally register themselves.
  • Can be assigned as homework.
  • Teachers and mentors can control and monitor all work from any device.

High School Financial Literacy Curriculum (4)

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What You'll Learn Here About Our High School Curriculum:

You'll see a few of our 20 topics and 70 videos and animations.

You'll also see how we use peer-to-peer teaching to connect with your students.

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Work Less and Make More!

We teach kids that money goes farther if you spend wisely, not impulsively.

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Hey, What Did That Fine Print Say?

The opposite of what the ad said? Happens all the time.

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Choosing a College.

Do you get more for paying for the big name? Not usually.

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What's the Real Credit Card Company Mission?

To always get you to borrow more.

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You're on Your Own and Out-of-Control:

Like a wild taxi ride.

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Why Credit Cards Should Be Called "Debt" Cards:

Because it’s the truth!

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What Would Ads Say if They Told the Truth?

Please don't watch this if you are an advertiser.

  • High School Curriculum Overview

Core message: Your credit will rule your life.

  1. Understanding You and your money.
  2. Basic fundamentals of money and decision making.
  3. Identify the role of money in your life.
  4. Explore the common mistakes made with money.
  5. Identify the consequences of being irresponsible with money, including the impact on job prospects.
  6. Examine the real-life scary look at financial scams aimed at young people.
  7. Identify the real-life potential dangers of poor decision-making regarding money.

Core message: You are the only person who determines your credit.

  1. Identify what a bad decision is using examples based on teenagers' common mistakes.
  2. Explain what credit is.
  3. Identify the role of credit in your life.
  4. Identify what mistakes can be made with poor credit decisions.
  5. Explain the importance of paying on time.
  6. Explain the dangers of minimum payments.
  7. Identify what a credit score is and identify the five factors that control credit score.
  8. Identify and comprehend risk-based lending.

Core message: Smart consumers critically evaluate marketing and advertising messages rather than simply accepting them.

  1. Demonstrate personal responsibility when it comes to credit.
  2. Identify the components of a credit score.
  3. Separate fact from opinion when you evaluate products and services.
  4. Critically evaluate fine print in marketing, advertising and promotion.
  5. Identify predatory lending and how it may affect you now and in your future.
  6. Explain consumerism and differentiate between your well-being and the corporate well-being.

Core message: Checking accounts and savings accounts are indispensable, powerful, and potentially dangerous tools.

  1. Demonstrate how to use a checking and savings accounts.
  2. Identify what a checking account is.
  3. Practice using a checking account and debit card.
  4. Compare and contrast debit cards and ATM cards.
  5. Explore the features of automated financial services such as, electronic transfers and bill paying online.
  6. Explain the importance of always knowing the true balance of your checking account.
  7. Practice reconciling your bank statement.
  8. Identify check holds and minimum balances.
  9. Examine the various types of financial services and the differences between banks and credit unions.
  10. Identify mistakes you can make with your checking account that could lead to bad credit.

Core message: Detailed interactive checking account module that allows your students practical guided practice using a checking account to be used after Module 4, Road Trip.

Core message: Use credit cards very wisely or you will be hurt.

  1. Select strategies to use in handling credit cards and debt.
  2. Explain how credit cards and other unsecured loans work.
  3. Identify and define credit, loan, annual percentage rate, interest and principal.
  4. Explain the importance of timely payments.
  5. Explain the grace period with credit cards.
  6. Identify the dangers of financing long-term debt with credit cards.
  7. Compare various credit card offers to identify the ramifications of making purchases with credit.
  8. Compare and contrast financial institutions that offer credit cards.
  9. Identify the consequences of going over your limit and paying late.
  10. Explain how to manage credit responsibly.

Core message: Detailed interactive credit card module that reinforces the curriculum in Module 6, Sucker Punch!

  • Episode One: Burning Money

    Core message: Burning money introduces the concept that money is a limited and perishable resource: we spend our lives trying to have enough of it, and once we've spent it, it's gone.

    1. Learning to accept responsibility for every spending decision.
    2. How to determine if an expense is a fixed or a variable expense.
    3. Recognizing"good" from "bad" money burns.
    4. The importance of record-keeping in the budgeting and saving process.
    5. How to easily keep detailed records of income and expenses.
    6. Illustrate why savings plans are worthless if they don't work hand-in-hand with a budget.
  • Episode Two: Work Harder! Make Less!

    Core message: This module allows students to see how their money habits in high school will have an enormous impact on the quality of their life the minute they begin to go to college and/or begin to support themselves. It also shows them why every budgeting and saving decision is impacted by spending decisions.

    1. Has the student identify in an interactive exercise the consequences of bad consumer decisions.
    2. The impact of paying late on your credit score.
    3. The continuing impact your credit score has on many areas of your life, from employment, to housing and insurance.
    4. The difference in gross and net pay, and the impact that difference makes on life.
    5. The budgeting process, its complexity, and the impact of bad decisions on the budgeting process.
    6. The episode explores why bad money decisions themselves happen.
    7. The episode allows the student to calculate how one bad decision can lead to months or years of extra expense.
    8. The episode explains the role of the free enterprise system and the responsibilities that system places on the consumer.
    9. The episode allows the student to discover the critical importance of comparison shopping, and doing your homework.
    10. The episode teaches checking writing and account balancing skills.
  • Episode Three: Work Less! Make More!

    Core message: Incorporates a student's individual seven-day spending record to illustrate the "work less, make more" principle. The episode also helps each student understand key money management principles. The episode also emphasizes the importance of savings in maintaining a budget.

    1. If you don't have savings, how do you pay for unexpected expenses?
    2. Demonstrates in an interactive exercise the differences between "wants" versus "needs," and then evaluates each student's expenses to determine which were "wants" rather than"needs."
    3. Students work through an interactive exercise on fixed and variable costs, and then determine which of their expenses were fixed or variable.
    4. Identifies in an exercise how many variable expenses can be lowered.
    5. The student shows an understanding of impulse buying, and then determines which expenditures were "impulse" expenses.
    6. Students will navigate an interactive exercise which illustrates the impact of unexpected expenses or our quality of life. The exercise requires each student to list his or her own unexpected expenses.
  • Episode 4: Me? A Millionaire?

    Core message: Budgeting, savings and spending decisions and the importance of planning for financial issues and retirement.

    1. The importance of planning ahead for financial issues and retirement.
    2. Demonstrates the importance of beginning a savings plan early in life.
    3. Identifies the importance of discipline when it comes to financial decisions.
    4. Demonstrates the importance of making conscious decisions rather than acting on impulse.
    5. Explains the importance of understanding the difference in investments and permanently depreciating assets and investing in income-producing assets.
    6. Identifies the reason for paying yourself first and illustrates that this key habit can be learned by anyone.
    7. Teaches the importance of learning how to make smart decisions when it comes to money by doing your research.
    8. Identifies the differences in the sources of information available to make decisions. For instance, the difference in advertising and a review by a consumer advocate when it comes to accurate information.
    9. Teaches that each consumer is ultimately responsible for his or her decisions in the consumer marketplace.
    10. Teaches how to recognize the difference in legitimate sources of information and biased sources of information.
    11. Explains the role of consumer advocates in the consumer marketplace.
    12. Evaluates the role of advertising in consumer decisions.
    13. Demonstrates that education can increase your earning power.
    14. Identifies the critical role of compounding interest in building savings.

Core message: "Moving Out" immerses the student in the thought processes needed to make moving out a successful experience.

  1. Why money problems means you probably have to move back in with your family before you are thirty.
  2. Understanding the importance of good credit in the rental process.
  3. Why moving out and staying out requires long-term planning and homework.
  4. How do you prepare right now for moving out on your own?
  5. Understanding renting and leasing lingo.
  6. Budgeting for your life as a renter.
  7. Should you rent month-to-month or long term?
  8. What factors should you consider when selecting your first nest?
  9. Common mistakes made by first-time renters.
  10. Understanding the role and objectives of rental agents and landlords.
  11. Your rights and responsibilities as a renter.
  12. Smart and dumb ways to furnish your first nest.
  13. Renters' insurance: do you need it?

Core message: "Home buying" looks at the reasons young people should understand the home buying process many years before they actually buy their first home. It teaches the skills necessary to prepare for the best and least- expensive home buying experience down the road.

  1. How do you know when you're ready to consider buying rather than renting?
  2. Why buying a home is a much more complex and potentially dangerous financial transaction than renting a home.
  3. What steps should a young person take now to ensure a better home buying and mortgage experience down the road?
  4. Understanding home buying and mortgage terminology.
  5. What is a sensible process for finding the best home and the best mortgage?
  6. Understanding the role of mortgage brokers, lenders, and real estate agents in the home buying process.

Core message: "Gambling" presents a detailed look at the societal costs and potential benefits of organized gambling.

  • What exactly is "gambling"?
  • Understanding the odds of winning in professional gambling: the theories of probability and predictability and the difference in an "independent" event and a "dependent" event.
  • What is the difference in the normal gambles we take daily in life and gambling online, at a casino or at a slot machine?
  • Understanding the clues that identify a casual rather than a habitual gambler. When does gambling become a problem rather than a pastime?
  • How to recognize when gambling is becoming a problem.
  • How organized gambling uses psychological techniques to manipulate customers.
  • Why and how online gambling sites target young gamblers.

Core message: "Tax Me!" reviews the impact of taxes on our lives and explains to the student the responsibilities required of all taxpayers.

  • What is a tax and why do taxes exist?
  • When are you required to start paying taxes?
  • Understanding the "Ability to Pay" and the "Benefits Received" concepts of taxation.
  • Understanding the principles of "progressive" and "regressive" taxation.
  • Understanding the different types of taxes and the importance of your decisions concerning taxes.
  • Understanding the principle of tax deductions.
  • The importance of keeping records and filing taxes on time.
  • Understand tax terminology and key tax forms.

Core message: "Giving Versus Getting" illustrates the value of giving back to the community, demonstrates the role of charities and not-for-profits, and teaches the student how to responsibly become a contributor to charitable causes and organizations.

  • The personal and professional benefits of being a charitable person.
  • How young people can make an important impact with their charitable efforts.
  • Understanding the differences in a "for profit" and a "not for profit" organization.
  • The role of not-for-profits in an economy built on the for-profit ethos.
  • Understanding how to evaluate the merits of a charity or not-for-profit organization.
  • Understanding how to recognize scams in the charity world.
  • How to recognize charity scams aimed specifically at young people.

Core message: "Who Needs Money?" focuses in great detail on the enormous impact of even a minimal college education on the lifetime income of any young person.

  1. The concept that educational decisions made in high school will have a lifetime impact on the average student's income.
  2. Determining how much lifetime income various years of education bring to the average student.
  3. College or trade-school options for students with little or no income or poor grades.
  4. The great educational value offered by community colleges and state-supported schools compared to many private schools.
  5. The difference in a "job" and a "career".
  6. How to choose a trade school or other commercial school.

Core message: What is insurance, why do we at times need it, and how do we find the best insurance at the lowest cost?

  1. Understanding the concept of "risk."
  2. Understanding how insurance works.
  3. Insurance terminology.
  4. How do insurance companies determine rates?
  5. How do you determine what insurance you need?
  6. How do you "shop" for that insurance?
  7. Understanding all the factors that impact auto insurance cost and coverage.
  8. How a young driver selects the proper types and amounts of auto insurance coverage.
  9. Understanding your responsibilities when driving under your parents' insurance umbrella and the consequences of not meeting those responsibilities.
  10. Understanding health and life insurance.
  11. What is a sensible way to shop for the best insurance coverage?

Core message: "Broke!" explores the causes and consequences of bankruptcy. It explores in detail the alternatives to bankruptcy, and discusses the different types of bankruptcy remedies available to a consumer.

  1. Why does a young person need to learn about bankruptcy?
  2. What are both the practical and legal definitions of bankruptcy?
  3. Why do people go bankrupt?
  4. What are the practical and legal consequences of going bankrupt?
  5. How should a person evaluate whether or not to file for bankruptcy?
  6. What are the alternatives to filing for bankruptcy?
  7. How do you tell the difference between a legitimate debt settlement organization and a unethical or ineffective organization?
  8. What scams are aimed at consumers in serious financial trouble?
  9. What are the different types of bankruptcy?

Core message: An investment account can put your money to work for you while you do other things like sleep, and right now is the time to start that account.

  • If you are wise with your money, you can start an investment account now.
  • What is the difference in "saving" and "investing"?
  • It is impossible to be a consistent saver or investor if you don't have spare cash.
  • What is "opportunity cost" and how does that concept impact your ability to save or invest?
  • When you have unnecessary debt, such as debt on credit cards, you're usually paying more in interest on that debt than you can make on an investment.
  • Unnecessary debt is usually invisible debt: we don't think about the fact that it impacts our ability to invest.
  • The impact of compound interest on savings and investment accounts.
  • What is an event "Time Horizon" and how does it impact our savings and investing decisions?
  • How do you determine how much risk you can undertake when you make investments?
  • Why do some people make bad risk-tolerance decisions?
  • What is "liquidity" and how does it impact our decisions?
  • How do you judge whether or not an investment is successful?
  • Understanding "ROI" and "Rate of Return."
  • Why don't more people invest regularly?
  • Goal setting for your savings and investment plans.
  • Understanding the "Rule of 72" and how to use it.
  • What type of investments can young people make?
  • What exactly does the term "risky" mean in relation to savings and investment plans?
  • How do you keep from falling for pressure and deceptive sales tactics when you invest?
  • What is a good strategy for starting an investment plan right now?
  • What is an investment "portfolio"?
  • What are the basic types of investment vehicles?
  • What are the relative risk levels of various investment vehicles?
  • What is the role of investment vehicles such as 401k's in a young person's investment plans?
  • What is the main objective of even the most honest person selling investments?
  • Why is it important to question all investment advice and gather a second independent decision before making any investment?

Note: This module is designed to be done directly after Investment, Module 17.

Core message: You are responsible for making sure you have funds to lead an independent life when you retire.

  • By the time most people start worrying about what they will live on after retirement, it is nearly too late for them to develop a retirement plan.
  • What are you going to do for money later in life?
  • You cannot depend on the government or your place of employment to take care of you at retirement.
  • You will need to save a much smaller percentage of your income for retirement if you start now rather than later.
  • How do you determine how much of your income you should set aside for retirement?
  • How does inflation impact a retirement or savings plan?
  • Why investment accounts can pay a higher rate of return than savings accounts.
  • Factors that impact your success as an investor who is saving for retirement.
  • Why high-interest loan accounts such as credit cards dramatically lower the funds you have available to invest or save.

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National Endorsem*nts:

FoolProof's messages are shaped by educators, students, experts, and consumer advocates, not by marketers.

The FoolProof curriculum is the only curriculum in the United States endorsed by the Consumer Federation of America, the National Association of Consumer Advocates, Public Citizen and Fairplay.

High School Financial Literacy Curriculum (5)

Comments from Respected Sources:

High School Financial Literacy Curriculum (6)

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Jackie Gingrich Cushman

Columnist and Author

Jackie Gingrich Cushman is a noted columnist and author. Her website says her mission best: "When all sides on the political spectrum appear content to be talking only to themselves, they are doing both themselves and the rest of the nation a disservice. Finding Common Ground is the only way to save our nation."

We're happy to say Jackie believes FoolProofMe's resources are one place both sides can find common ground.

We're equally happy to say she's joined FoolProofMe's Red and Blue Walter Cronkite Project.

High School Financial Literacy Curriculum (7)

"The staggering amount of time pre-teens spend on digital devices makes them particularly vulnerable to marketers.

FoolProof's Curricula provides a powerful antidote. It empowers kids at a critical time in their development by teaching healthy skepticism.

Kids who use the curricula will be better equipped to avoid scams, resist impulse buying and recognizing manipulative marketing techniques.

The curriculum is a strong tool for teachers to introduce the core concepts of debt, informed decision-making, and materialism –we'd love to see it in every school!"

Josh Golin

Executive Director Jean Rogers, Screen Time Program Manager Fairplay

High School Financial Literacy Curriculum (8)

"Most financial wellness classes around the world teach students that financial well-being requires nothing more than knowledge about the financial products available today and trust in the financial system.

FoolProof's program teaches students how the financial system really works — including the fact that businesses and financial firms often try to take advantage of them.

But FoolProof's program does not stop there.

It also teaches kids how they can determine which information is and is not trustworthy. It teaches them how they can develop habits that will help them avoid financial distress. And it teaches them how they can assess the amount of debt they can handle.

These are lessons that will last a lifetime, no matter how financial product offerings change."

Lauren E. Willis

Professor of Law and Rains Senior Research Fellow, Loyola Law School Los AngelesAuthor, The Financial Education Fallacy and Against Financial Literacy Education

High School Financial Literacy Curriculum (9)

"Pre-teens are so vulnerable to advertising! As middle school kids grapple with self-consciousness, out of control hormones, and peer pressure, marketers know exactly how to exploit—and profit from—their vulnerabilities. Middle-schoolers are targeted incessantly with the false message that their success and happiness depends on what they buy. Foolproof's excellent new curriculum is a wonderful tool for helping kids on the cusp of adolescence gain crucial skills for successfully navigating life in a heavily commercialized culture. I hope it's used in middle schools everywhere."

Susan Linn, Ed.D

Lecturer in Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Research Associate, Boston Children's Hospital, and Founder of Fairplay

High School Financial Literacy Curriculum (10)

"As a psychologist who, for 25 years, has been researching the problems associated with materialistic values and consumerism, I'm so pleased to see FoolProof's new curriculum for middle-school students.

I think it is clear, clever, and engaging, and I really like how it talks straight to kids about the ways that marketers and corporations are trying to manipulate and profit off of them.

I strongly encourage teachers and parents to give FoolProof's curriculum a look and decide if they think it is right for the children in their lives."

Tim Kasser, Ph.D.

Professor & Chair of Psychology Knox CollegeDr. Kasser is author of The High Price of Materialism (MIT Press, 2002), Psychology & Consumer Culture (American Psychological Association Press, 2004), and HyperCapitalism: The modern economy, its values,
and how to change them (The New Press, 2018).

More Information on FoolProof:

High School Financial Literacy Curriculum (11)

FoolProof Foundation

The FoolProof Foundation's core mission is to teach consumers the importance of using caution, questioning sellers, and relying on independent research before spending money. We have created interactive, online programs to allow us to provide the widest possible exposure to our resources.

More Info.

High School Financial Literacy Curriculum (12)

Walter Cronkite Project

In 2003, Cronkite's enthusiastic support of a young consumer advocate named Will deHoo led to the creation of FoolProof. Cronkite was engaged with FoolProof for the remainder of his active life.

More Info.

High School Financial Literacy Curriculum (2024)

FAQs

Should schools teach financial literacy as part of the curriculum? ›

With school-aged kids currently growing up during turbulent economic times, teaching them financial literacy early on and arming them with the skills they need to make informed finance-related decisions can have long-lasting positive effects on their lives.

How effective are financial literacy classes? ›

Research shows that students who have access to high-quality financial education have better financial outcomes as adults that result in less debt and a higher quality of life.

What to teach high school students about financial literacy? ›

Saving and investing
  • Banking options.
  • Building emergency savings.
  • Choosing how to save.
  • Investing.
  • Saving for college.
  • Saving for long-term goals.
  • Saving for short-term goals.

Why is financial education no longer part of the curriculum? ›

Another reason for the lack of financial education in schools is that educational decisions are made on a state level. That means there are no federal mandates or guidelines to help schools master the most effective approach to teaching personal finance.

Why is financial literacy not taught in high school? ›

High schools might avoid teaching personal finance due to several reasons, including the perceived lack of relevance to students' current lives, the gap between financial literacy and financial responsibility, and the practical constraints of traditional teaching methods.

Why don't we teach financial literacy in schools? ›

We don't have enough instructors to teach finance classes (see reason #1) Personal finance isn't part of the ACT or SAT – if it's not tested it's not taught. Education is up to the states, not the feds, and each state has different ideas. There isn't much agreement as to which finance concepts would be taught.

What is the downside of financial literacy? ›

Financial literacy can have negative effects on individuals' financial behaviors and attitudes. People with high levels of financial literacy tend to take too many risks, overborrow, and hold naive financial attitudes, which can lead to reckless behavior in certain financial aspects .

What are the cons of financial literacy education? ›

So what are the downsides of financial literacy? Some may argue that focusing so heavily on personal finance could make some people more materialistic and obsessed with money. While this is possible. Focusing on how to grow your wealth could lead to some materialism.

Should financial literacy be taught in high school? ›

Ideally, personal finance concepts should be taught in elementary, middle and high school, and should continue into college. In mathematics, you start with counting, move on to addition and subtraction, and then move on to division and multiplication. You need to learn letters before you can read.

What is the 50 30 20 rule? ›

The 50/30/20 budget rule states that you should spend up to 50% of your after-tax income on needs and obligations that you must have or must do. The remaining half should be split between savings and debt repayment (20%) and everything else that you might want (30%).

What is the most effective method to teach financial literacy? ›

Children learn best through practical examples. Involve them in age-appropriate discussions about family finances, like planning a budget for a family vacation or comparing prices while shopping. Real-life scenarios help children understand the value of money and the importance of making wise financial choices.

How to teach high school students about investing? ›

Here are some tips to help teach healthy investing habits.
  1. Teach teens the basics of investing. ...
  2. Start with companies your teens know. ...
  3. Stress the importance of diversification. ...
  4. Teach teens the benefits of a "buy and hold" strategy. ...
  5. Teach patience: Show teens how compounding works over time.

Why is financial literacy declining? ›

In fact, much of the downward trend in financial literacy can be traced back to respondents increasingly selecting “don't know” as their response option to the underlying questions. The rise in “don't know” responses accounts for 75 percent of the drop in financial knowledge from 2009 to 2021.

Do American schools teach financial literacy? ›

Right now, more than half the states require schools to offer personal finance in high school. But not all of those states require students to actually take a personal finance course to graduate.

Was financial literacy ever taught in schools? ›

Financial literacy today

Today, it's taught in high schools and colleges around the country. At last count, 47 states included personal finance in their K-12 standards. However, of those, only 27 states are required to offer a personal finance class, and only 23 states require high school students to take one.

Why financial literacy should be taught? ›

When students take a financial literacy course, they learn personal finance, budgeting, and investing. They become better equipped and informed to make important financial decisions in the future that could impact their long-term financial success and quality of life.

Why is it important to teach financial literacy? ›

A strong foundation of financial literacy can help support various life goals, such as saving for education or retirement, using debt responsibly, and running a business. Key aspects of financial literacy include knowing how to create a budget, plan for retirement, manage debt, and track personal spending.

Should finances be taught in school? ›

By exposing students to money concepts early on, they can learn – and make mistakes – when the stakes are much lower. Including personal finance in schools is important for another reason as well. While we can hope that these concepts are something that families talk about at home, we know that's not always the case.

Should kids be taught financial literacy? ›

Teaching kids the basics of money management can help them develop the skills necessary to achieve financial success later in life. From saving and investing to creating and sticking to a budget, early money lessons can give your kids a leg up when it's time for them to make more significant financial decisions.

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