2017 Case Summary - Center for Financial Literacy (2024)

Why High Schools?

Personal finance education should start early at both home and 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. Personal finance education should be a cumulative process, with age-appropriate topics taught each school year. The reality is that many states and school districts do not provide any substantive personal finance education until high school, if at all.

The basics of personal financial planning-teaching young people about money, its value, how to save, invest and spend, and how not to waste it-should be taught in school as early as elementary school. But too many school districts teach personal finance for the first and only time in high school.

According to the National Center for Education Statistics, in 2015, 69% of students enrolled in college in the fall immediately following high school completion.1That means that about 31% of students are likely entering the workforce after high school. For those graduates who choose to go on to higher education, personal finance education in college is often scant and scattered, with few colleges offering a personal finance elective and even fewer requiring personal finance instruction as a graduation requirement. Regardless of when a young person’s formal education ends, they will be thrust into situations where they need to know how to manage daily living expenses. So, high school seems like the best and most logical place to deliver personal finance education to America’s youth.

Admittedly, a high school focus could omit some of the students who have dropped out of high school. The National Center for Education Statistics indicates that the high school dropout rate (the percentage of people ages 16 through 24 who are not enrolled in school and have not earned a high school credential) was about 6% in 2015.2

The Center’s High School Report Card focuses on each state’s financial literacy education policy because that data is obtainable. It is very hard to measure the amount and intensity of personal finance instruction that is occurring in people’s homes, and meaningful data on this topic is hard to obtain for the thousands of elementary and middle schools across the country. Definitive college data is equally hard to find in this area. However, a lot of great things are happening in our colleges and universities as well as our elementary and middle schools. In the section of this report entitled “Extra Credit: State Policies and Programs That Are Making a Difference,” we attempt to give you a small sampling of the many state initiatives that are trying to bring personal finance concepts to K-8 children and to young adults in college or the workplace.

The Case for High School Financial Literacy

Personal finance education in high school provides students with the knowledge and skills to manage financial resources effectively for a lifetime of financial well-being. Here are just some of the reasons our young people need to learn about personal finance:

  • The number of financial decisions an individual must make continues to increase, and the variety and complexity of financial products continues to grow. Young people often do not understand debit and credit cards, mortgages, banking, investment and insurance products and services, payday lending, rent-to-own products, credit reports, credit scores, etc.
  • Many students do not understand that one of the most important financial decisions they will make in their lives is choosing whether they should go to college after high school, and if they decide to pursue additional education, what field to specialize in.
  • Kids are not learning about personal finance at home. A2017 T. Rowe Price Surveynoted that 69% of parents have some reluctance about discussing financial matters with their kids.3In fact, parents are nearly as uncomfortable talking to their children about sex as they are about money. Only 23% of kids surveyed indicated that they talk to their parents frequently about money, and 35% stated that their parents are uncomfortable talking to them about money.
  • On aninternational financial literacy test of 15-year-olds, the U.S. ranked 7th out of 15 countries,trailing China, Canada, Russia and Australia, and was just slightly better than Poland-what a”Sputnik moment.”4
  • A2016 surveyindicated that only 31% of young Americans (ages 18 to 26) agreed that their high school education did a good job of teaching them healthy financial habits.5
  • Most college students borrow to finance their education, yet they often do so without fully understanding how much debt is appropriate for their education or the connection between their area of study and the income level that they can expect upon graduation. Many students attend college without understanding financial aid, loans, debt, credit, inflation, budgeting and credit scores.
  • At many colleges, financial literacy education is largely composed of brief, federally mandated entrance and exit loan counseling for students. Student feedback indicates that most do not comprehend the information presented, and view it as one more requirement of the financial aid process rather than a learning opportunity.
  • Student debt can be very high for some recent college graduates and large debt variations exist from state to state. According to a recent study of 2016 four-year public and private college graduates, these students left college with average student debt that ranged from a low of $20,000 in Utah to a high of $36,350 in New Hampshire. The percent of these students graduating with debt ranged from a low of 43% in Utah to a high of 77% in West Virginia.6According to the U.S. Department of Education, 11.5% of students who graduated from college in 2014 have loans in default.7
  • Employee pension plans are disappearing and being replaced by defined contribution retirement programs, which impose greater responsibilities on young adults to save and invest, and ultimately spend retirement savings wisely. If they fail to do this, they could become a significant economic burden on our society.
  • A2014 studyindicated that only 24% of Millennials (ages 18 to 34) surveyed could answer four out of five questions correctly in a financial literacy quiz.8By comparison, 48% of Baby Boomers (born between 1946 and 1962) were able to answer four out of five correctly. While Boomers should be more knowledgeable, our young citizens are dangerously illiterate in this area.
  • Credit scores are a difficult concept for many young adults. The economic cost of low (or no) credit score is very high. One’s credit score and borrowing history impacts one’s daily life: applying for a credit card, purchasing a home or car, renting an apartment, buying insurance, signing up for certain utilities, and even getting a new job. Having an excellent credit score could save a consumer in excess of a $100,000 in interest payments over a lifetime (see:Credit.com’s Lifetime Cost of Debt Calculator).

Financial literacy leads to better personal finance behavior. There are a variety of studies that indicate that individuals with higher levels of financial literacy make better personal finance decisions. Those who are financially illiterate are less likely to have a checking account, rainy day emergency fund or retirement plan, or to own stocks. They are also more likely to use payday loans, pay only the minimum amount owed on their credit cards, have high-cost mortgages, and have higher debt and credit delinquency levels.

As a society, we need more training programs that increase the number of financially literate citizens who are able to make better and wiser financial decisions in their own lives. Such programs are not just good for the individual but also helpful to society. The 2008 financial crisis clearly shows that poor financial decisions by individuals had negative consequences on our country.

The good news is that studies indicate that financial literacy educational interventions in high school appear to have a positive impact on knowledge and measurable financial behaviors:

  • MANDATED FINANCIAL LITERACY EDUCATION IMPROVES CREDIT BEHAVIOR.Researchers focused on three states where material personal finance high school education mandates were recently enacted (Brown, Collins, Schmeiser, and Urban, 2014).9Default rates and credit scores of recently graduated students who received this education were compared to similarly aged individuals in bordering states that did not change their financial literacy education requirements in high school. It was found that mandated personal finance education in high school improved the credit scores and reduced the default rates of young adults. There was no measurable change in the bordering states over the same time period measured.
  • ROBUST EDUCATOR TRAINING AND A WELL-DESIGNED CURRICULUM WORK.Another study shows that a well-designed personal finance course (one semester in length), taught by highly trained educators who attended a 30-hour week-long training program and used a specific curriculum, improved the average personal finance knowledge of the students in all standard and concept areas covered by the researchers’ assessment examination (Asarta, Hill, and Meszaros, 2014).10
  • EDUCATORS WHO LEARN TO TEACH PERSONAL FINANCE IN A GRADUATE-LEVEL COURSE ARE DRAMATICALLY MORE CONFIDENT AND EFFECTIVE.Students who learn personal finance from these trained teachers showed significant knowledge gains in all test topics, while a control group of students who did not receive personal finance education dropped slightly in knowledge in all but one area. Also, students who received formal education by trained teachers reported some improvement in most personal finance behaviors measured. Indeed, students who received personal finance education by trained teachers had “high financial literacy” on par with the literacy levels of Generation X (ages 35 to 49) and higher than that of older Millennials (ages 18 to 34) (Champlain College’s Center for Financial Literacy, 2015).11

As former President Bill Clinton stated, financial literacy is “a very fancy term for saying spend it smart, don’t blow it, save what you can and know how the economy works.”12Financial literacy, just like reading, writing and arithmetic, builds human capital by empowering individuals with the ability to create personal wealth to buy a home, go to college, have a rainy day and retirement fund.

We would not allow a young person to get in the driver’s seat of a car without requiring driver’s education, and yet we allow our youth to enter the complex financial world without any related education. An uneducated individual armed with a credit card, a student loan and access to a mortgage can be nearly as dangerous to themselves and their community as a person with no training behind the wheel of a car.

1 –U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics and the Institute of Education Sciences. “Fast Facts, Back to School Statistics.”https://nces.ed.gov/fastfacts/display.asp?id=372.

2 –U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics and the Institute of Education Sciences. “Fast Facts, Dropout Rates.”https://nces.ed.gov/fastfacts/display.asp?id=16.

3 – T. Rowe Price. “Parents, Kids & Money Survey.” http://www.moneyconfidentkids.com/content/money-confident-kids/en/us/media/research/2017-parents–kids—money-survey-results.html.

4 – Organisation of Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). PISA 2015 Results: “Students and Money: Students Financial Literacy (Volume IV).” PISA, OECD Publishing.http://www.keepeek.com/Digital-Asset-Management/oecd/education/pisa-2015-results-volume-iv_9789264270282-en#.WeUF0ltSyUk.

5 – Bank of America/USA TODAY Better Money Habits Report, “Young Americans & Money, Fall 2016.”https://about.bankofamerica.com/assets/pdf/BOA_BMH_2016-REPORT-v5.pdf.

6 – The Institute for College Access & Success. “Student Debt and the Class of 2016.” https://ticas.org/sites/default/files/pub_files/classof2016.pdf.

7 – U.S. Department of Education, Federal Student Aid. “Official Cohort Default Rate for Schools.”https://www2.ed.gov/offices/OSFAP/defaultmanagement/cdr.html.

8 – Mottola, Gary. “The Financial Capability of Young Adults-A Generational View.” FINRA Foundation Financial Capability Insights.http://www.usfinancialcapability.org/downloads/FinancialCapabilityofYoungAdults.pdf.

9 – Brown, Collins, Schmeiser, and Urban, 2014. “State Mandated Financial Education and the Credit Behavior of YoungAdults.”https://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/feds/2014/201468/201468pap.pdf.

10 – Asarta, Hill, and Meszaros, 2014. “The features and effectiveness of the Keys to Financial Success curriculum.”http://nebula.wsimg.com/7c3014715076f1f6a49caa6f4b6af123?AccessKeyId=27E1C5C94AE9959DA340&disposition=0&alloworigin=1.

11 – Champlain College’s Center for Financial Literacy, 2015. “Prepped for Success, A Study of Teacher Training, Financial Literacy & Classroom Outcomes.”https://www.champlain.edu/centers-of-excellence/center-for-financial-literacy/report-prepped-for-success.

12 – Klein, Asher and Giordano, Jackie. “Bill Clinton Visits USC to Teach Kids Value of Financial Literacy.” Channel 4, Southern California.http://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/local/Bill-Clinton-Visits-USC-to-Host-Financial-Literacy-Event-282070241.html.

2017 Case Summary - Center for Financial Literacy (2024)

FAQs

2017 Case Summary - Center for Financial Literacy? ›

It was found that mandated personal finance education

education
onderwyser (plural onderwysers, feminine onderwyseres) teacher (male, or gender neutral)
https://en.wiktionary.org › wiki › onderwyser
in high school improved the credit scores and reduced the default rates of young adults. There was no measurable change in the bordering states over the same time period measured. ROBUST EDUCATOR TRAINING AND A WELL-DESIGNED CURRICULUM WORK.

What are the 5 key components of financial literacy? ›

The U.S. FLEC highlights five principles as the building blocks of financial literacy, known as the MyMoney Five.
  • EARN.
  • SPEND.
  • SAVE & INVEST.
  • BORROW.
  • PROTECT.
Apr 17, 2024

What is financial literacy center? ›

Financial Literacy Centres are the building blocks or the basic units that initiate the financial literacy activities at the ground level. Hence banks should provide the minimum basic infrastructure and strengthen the existing FLC Eco-system.

What are the four pillars of financial literacy? ›

Financial literacy is having a basic grasp of money matters and its four fundamental pillars: debt, budgeting, saving, and investing. It's understanding how to build wealth throughout one's life by leveraging the power of these pillars.

What is the best book for financial literacy? ›

10 Financial Literacy Books to Learn From
  • Total Money Makeover by Dave Ramsey.
  • Rich Dad Poor Dad: What the Rich Teach Their Kids About Money – That the Poor and Middle Class Do Not! ...
  • How to Retire Early: Your Guide to Getting Rich Slowly and Retiring on Less by Robert and Robin Charlton.
Nov 3, 2023

What are the three C's in financial literacy? ›

Students classify those characteristics based on the three C's of credit (capacity, character, and collateral), assess the riskiness of lending to that individual based on these characteristics, and then decide whether or not to approve or deny the loan request.

What is the 80-10-10 rule of saving? ›

When following the 10-10-80 rule, you take your income and divide it into three parts: 10% goes into your savings, and the other 10% is given away, either as charitable donations or to help others. The remaining 80% is yours to live on, and you can spend it on bills, groceries, Netflix subscriptions, etc.

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 dedicate 20% to savings, leaving 30% to be spent on things you want but don't necessarily need.

What does Robert Kiyosaki say about financial literacy? ›

Robert Kiyosaki, the founder of the “Rich Dad, Poor Dad” empire, says that there are six basic words that are key to financial literacy and education: income, expense, asset, liability and cash flow.

What is the first rule of financial literacy? ›

1. Budget your money. In general, there are four main uses for money: spending, saving, investing and giving away. Finding the right balance among these four categories is essential, and a budget can be a very useful tool to help you accomplish this.

Who has the highest financial literacy in the world? ›

The countries with the highest financial literacy rates are Australia, Canada, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Israel, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, and the United Kingdom, where about 65 percent or more of adults are financially literate.

Is financial literacy a hard or soft skill? ›

Students completing a co-op placement may also be asked to complete a qualification test to validate their hard skills such as financial literacy. Hard skills refer to acquired and learned skills that are used to complete a technical job or academic task.

What is the best age to teach financial literacy? ›

Teaching children about money management is essential in order to help them understand the value of money and equip them with the skills needed to manage it responsibly. Starting at 5 to 7 years old is a great way to begin developing their understanding of money management.

What are the 5 pillars of financial literacy? ›

It's not about earning a certain amount of money or having a specific figure saved; it's about your knowledge and comfort with the financial system. Financial literacy has five components: earn, spend, save and invest, borrow, and protect.

What are the 5 essential components of literacy? ›

The National Reading Panel identified five key concepts at the core of every effective reading instruction program: Phonemic Awareness, Phonics, Fluency, Vocabulary, and Comprehension.

What are the 5 steps of financial literacy? ›

The 5 components of financial literacy. There's plenty to learn about personal financial topics, but breaking them down can help simplify things. To start expanding your financial literacy, consider these five areas: budgeting, building and improving credit, saving, borrowing and repaying debt, and investing.

What are the 5 components of financial statement? ›

The major elements of the financial statements (i.e., assets, liabilities, fund balance/net assets, revenues, expenditures, and expenses) are discussed below, including the proper accounting treatments and disclosure requirements.

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