You are here

Financial Literacy Resources Teach Students How To Manage Money

Tuesday, March 29, 2022

Everyone should know how to manage their money. Some would even say it’s more important to know how to manage money than it is how to make it! The Chicago Federal Reserve Bank took that to heart in 2002 when it brought together 40 Chicago-area financial institutions to promote personal financial literacy (PFL) in its first Money Smart Week. Since then, it has become an annual nationwide effort. This year’s Money Smart Week (April 9 – 16) puts the focus on PFL for K-12 students.

Get Smart Virtually

Two of the latest PFL resources are virtual, free to Wisconsin schools, and accessible on Xello, Google Classroom, and other formats.

  • Money Path* is a financial planning program that uses real-world salaries and tuition to help students create a personalized plan. The program features side-by-side comparisons, and because students get access for life, they can update their plan as they grow and change.
  • Test Drive Digital* is a 100 percent virtual reality fair. Based on Royal Credit Union’s in-person reality fair, Test Drive has participants “earn” a monthly salary at age 25 based on their career plan and then manage it. Will they make it through the month? Maybe, but if they don’t, it won’t be a mark on their real-world credit score.

Age-Appropriate Resources

Since 2017 when Wisconsin started requiring its schools to incorporate K-12 PFL curriculum, the search for effective, engaging resources has been ongoing. The Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction (DPI) has its own Personal Financial Literacy webpage with a link to several resources on WISELearn.

The Wisconsin Department of Financial Institutions manages a “Look Forward to Your Future” site that aims to provide K-12 resources for all ages. Go to the page dedicated to resources for educators here to get curriculum ideas arranged by grade level.

Wisconsin Standards Lead the Way

The DPI’s PFL page also links to the updated financial literacy standards. Introduced in June 2020, the new standards help schools and educators at all grade levels develop programs that establish sound financial habits. The standards feature six strands:

  • Education and employment
  • Money management
  • Saving and investing
  • Credit and debt
  • Risk management and insurance
  • Financial mindset

The addition of the financial mindset strand sets Wisconsin apart from other states and national personal financial literacy standards. It addresses the mental habits needed to address financial decisions successfully.

The key is to get started early. A University of Cambridge study showed that kids form their money habits by as young as seven years old, and that their observant eyes are usually watching when their parents make monetary transactions (Whitehead and Bingham 2013)**. With deliberate intention and training, we can give our students a financial head start.

* Provided for informational purposes only. This product is not sponsored by or affiliated with the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction or the State of Wisconsin.

Subscriber submission: Wisconsin DPI Communications Specialist Carol Hutchison, Career and Technical Education team