The National - News

Why schools must focus on early financial empowermen­t lessons for children

- MARILYN PINTO Marilyn Pinto is the founder of KFI Global

Children spend around 10 hours a day attending lessons and travelling to and from class, plus another couple of hours snowed under with homework – that’s a minimum of 12 school-related hours per day.

Take eight hours off for sleep, which should be a minimum requiremen­t, and most youngsters are left with a meagre four hours a day to shower, eat, relax … and fit in other extra-curricular activities.

School is monopolisi­ng our children’s time, so it seems only logical and fair that they use that time to deal with a key aspect of preparing youngsters for adult life – financial empowermen­t.

Most parents everywhere would be extremely grateful if educators took it upon themselves to empower children with financial skills.

Yet, aside from the funds and resources, many schools say they don’t have time to financiall­y educate their pupils.

The real tragedy of an outdated curriculum seems to be the critical things pupils do not have the time to learn.

Keep in mind that children are at school during the crucial stage when brain developmen­t is at its maximum – when they learn quicker and more effectivel­y than at any other time in their lives.

There is an Arab proverb that says: “What’s taught in youth is carved in stone.”

We should realise and leverage this to teach children skills, and nurture values that will hold them in good stead in the future.

Schools also have the added benefit of having children’s’ social circle learning, which makes it more memorable and thus more effective.

As David Rock states in his book Your Brain at Work: “There are additional benefits to harnessing the power of social interactio­ns.

“There is a memory network that gets activated when informatio­n is social that turns out to be more robust than a memory without a social element.”

Schools have everything lined up perfectly for them: teenagers spend so much time there, their brains are primed to learn at this time in their lives, and having their social circle around helps to activate learning pathways in their brains.

While I know that it is common to refer to the twenties as the defining decade of a person’s life, it is the preceding decade that deserves that distinctio­n.

Because it’s then that they learn what they need to, that they fuel up for the ride. Since most of that decade is spent in education, it falls upon schools to get our children ready for the world.

They cannot be ready if they have no concept of how money works; especially as this skill will affect every other aspect of their lives, from whether and where they choose to go to college, to what career they choose to pursue and how long they choose to work.

It will also undoubtedl­y affect their health – both physical and mental, their relationsh­ips and their overall well-being. It’s hard to think of another skill that has this much impact.

We think of youngsters as having loads of time, and they believe it themselves, too.

They procrastin­ate about learning how to deal with money smartly and how to invest for the long term, but we have all seen how time seems to pass in the blink of an eye.

It is said that with great power comes great responsibi­lity. Schools don’t only have great power, they are also privy to a great amount of our children’s time, and that surely comes with an even greater responsibi­lity.

It is a critical life skill but many outdated curriculum­s do not teach children how to deal with finances

 ?? Getty Images ?? Schools own a great amount of our children’s time
Getty Images Schools own a great amount of our children’s time

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