Your Money: U.S. teachers take hands-on approach to
financial literacy
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[October 26, 2019] By
Chris Taylor
NEW YORK (Reuters) - There are a lot of
hard truths about money, but here is one of the hardest: We are really
bad at passing along money smarts.
As it stands, only 57% of American adults can be considered financially
literate, according to a global survey by Standard & Poor’s.
A new initiation from education fundraising website DonorsChoose.org and
the Charles Schwab Foundation is aiming to change that with a new
hands-on approach. Rather than kids reading about starting a business,
why not actually open a school store? Rather than reading about concepts
like supply and demand, why not start making T-shirts, and see if they
can sell them?
The “Innovation Challenge” prompts teachers to craft creative FinLit
projects, helps them get funded, and then monitors which ones pay off.
“Experiential learning is so important, especially for lower-income
families,” said Casey Cortese, managing director of Schwab’s community
services, which is taking a new hands-on approach to teaching financial
literacy. “If you make lessons tangible and real, it really cements
learning.”
This year's overall winner of an online fan vote: Students of Rapunzel
Galang in Lanham, Maryland, undertook virtual-reality field trips to
different historical landmarks through time. They did that using VR
headsets – but first they had to plan, budget, and pay for such trips,
by researching about the places they wanted to visit.
Another innovative project: Xavier Lewis in Dayton, Texas, combined
financial literacy with a “Mission to Mars” STEM project. Students
earned money in their virtual bank accounts with attendance, class
participation, and completing assignments. They could then spend that
money to buy supplies to assemble rockets, rovers and hovercrafts for a
simulated flight to Mars.
Other projects included creating a virtual-reality bank, filming a
how-to video series on personal finance, using dinosaurs to pass along
money lessons, and teaching the idea of “wants versus needs” via
dramatic play.
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Wood-cased coloured pencils are pictured in a shop at Faber-Castell
manufacturer in Stein near Nuremberg, Germany January 16, 2018.
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KEEP IT GOING
While 92% of teachers say financial education is important, only 12% actually
undertake it - because they just don’t have the resources, said Cortese.
To combat that with the Innovation Challenge, 15 of the top projects were
developed into full lesson plans. Teachers across the country could then
download them for free and use them in their own classes. The first 200 teachers
who did so, and submitted a report on how it went, got a $250 credit to apply to
future projects on the site.
The initiative has encouraged educators to think bigger and more creatively than
just using a crowdfunding site like DonorsChoose to cover things like basic
supplies. Since the Innovation Challenge first got started, “There has been a
66% increase in FinLit projects posted,” said Rianne Roberts, partnerships
manager for the fundraising site.
Financial literacy is a long game, though. You can teach a third grader about
money smarts today, but you will not know for years whether those habits have
actually taken root.
When the Schwab Foundation first started partnering with the site in 2017, 350
teachers participated in its financial literacy campaigns, reaching 36,000
students. In 2019, in comparison, they have already reached 1,600 teachers and
250,000 students.
So far this year, Schwab donated $375,000 to the Innovation Challenge, and
$500,000 total to DonorsChoose. Of those teachers who used the resulting
materials, 98% said they plan to keep teaching financial literacy in schools.
(Editing by Beth Pinsker; Editing by Lisa Shumaker; Follow us @ReutersMoney or
at http://www.reuters.com/finance/personal-finance.)
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