The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Pandemic spurs interest in school finance courses

- By Amrita Jayakumar NerdWallet

Many of us don’t learn how to manage money until we’re faced with our first true financial decision, like renting an apartment, applying for a credit card or buying a car. But what if you learned about budgeting or credit scores in the low-stakes environmen­t of a classroom instead? It may not sound like fun, but at least it’s more practical than trigonomet­ry.

Financial literacy hasn’t traditiona­lly been a priority in schools, but that is changing. The number of states requiring personal finance instructio­n in schools more than doubled over the past decade . Since the Great Recession, ballooning student loan debt and advocacy efforts, more people are aware of the importance of learning about money.

Now, because of the pandemic, educators say there’s never been more interest in the subject from students and parents. This year alone, lawmakers in more than 20 states introduced bills to add personal finance classes in high schools.

States shape how finance is taught

States typically dictate how personal finance is taught in schools. Twenty-two states required some form of personal finance education in high schools for the 2020-21 ac ademic year, according to research published in April by Carly Urban , an associate professor of economics at Montana State University. The benefits of teaching high school students basic personal finance concepts include better credit scores and lower rates of delinquenc­y on debt as adults, research by Urban and others shows.

But personal finance education requiremen­ts vary. Some states require a course to be offered as an elective in high schools. Others allow personal finance concepts to be tucked into broader subjects such as economics or mathematic­s. When a standalone personal finance course is offered, the curriculum may be outdated, which can defeat the purpose of teaching teenagers real-world skills.

“Teaching young people how to write a check is not enough in a world of Venmo,” a money transfer app, says Tim Ranzetta, co-founder of Next Gen Personal Finance, an organizati­on based in Palo Alto, California, that provides free curriculum and profession­al developmen­t for personal finance teachers nationwide. Next Gen advocates for personal finance to be offered as a mandatory standalone course for an entire semester.

Urban says the most important concepts students need to understand are how credit

scores and credit reports work, how to compare financial products like loans and how to make a budget that balances savings, paying off debt and managing expenses.

Pandemic makes money talk easier

Before the pandemic, personal finance classes were often spearheade­d by teachers who got into financial trouble and realized the importance of teaching kids about their mistakes, Urban says.

That’s how it went for Renee Nelson, an assistant department chair for the math department at KIPP NYC College Prep

, a charter school in the Bronx. Nelson was trying to pay off credit card debt and improve her profile enough to buy a home when she began sharing her journey with students. Seeing their interest in the subject, Nelson introduced a personal finance course that students can take for college credit as well as workshops for parents.

Teachers say the pandemic brought money discussion­s to the forefront because everyone was facing a crisis.

“It provided some realworld wrenches in the system, things that you don’t expect that can flip your plans upside down,” says William Joy, an instructor of marketing and personal finance at Lucy Garrett Beckham High School in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina. Joy says he would talk through budgeting examples in class, assigning students a fixed salary and making them allocate money toward different expenses. “Then I’d say, ‘Uh-oh the pandemic’s hit — you now make half the income, how will you spend the money?’”

Outside the classroom, money can be a taboo subject. But the past year gave families more time together and a chance to talk about it openly because many parents lost jobs or experience­d a decrease in income, says Gregg Murset, a father of six, a certified financial planner and founder and CEO of BusyKid, an app that teaches kids about money.

Educators say the pandemic also spurred students’ interest in how to build savings, why people invest in stocks and how cryptocurr­ency works.

Financial literacy isn’t a silver bullet

Financial education is helpful, but teachers are aware it doesn’t fix the consequenc­es of systemic racism and injustice. That’s part of the lesson they want to leave students with.

Nelson’s students are Black and Hispanic, live in low-income housing and are sometimes the first college-bound members of their families. During the social justice marches of 2020, Nelson says her students witnessed rioting and picketing outside their doorsteps and brought their questions about it to the classroom. She used the opportunit­y to teach them how decades of discrimina­tion led to economic inequality and how they could get involved with efforts to drive longterm change.

“Most of them don’t really know why their family is in this ongoing cycle of poverty,” Nelson says. “It was a great way to relate back to why there are all these problems in our community with money.”

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