“Are Teachers Making the Grade in Personal Finance ... - InsideARM” plus 3 more |
- Are Teachers Making the Grade in Personal Finance ... - InsideARM
- Three personal finance blogs to watch - Livemint.com
- Personal Finance: Frugality Forever - Washington Post
- HelloWallet Nabs $3.6 Million From Steve Case And ... - TechCrunch
| Are Teachers Making the Grade in Personal Finance ... - InsideARM Posted: 06 May 2010 09:05 AM PDT Denver -- While 89 percent of K-12 teachers agree that students should take a financial education course or pass a competency test for high school graduation, relatively few teachers believe they are adequately prepared to teach personal finance topics. University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers Wendy Way, Ph.D., and Karen Holden, Ph.D., recently surveyed more than 1,200 K-12 teachers, students currently enrolled in teacher education programs, and university teacher education faculty to better understand their training and education in personal finance and their capacity to teach these topics. The new study was funded by the National Endowment for Financial Education® (NEFE®). "This study reinforces the need to incorporate money management topics into educational opportunities for teachers and those studying to become teachers," says Ted Beck, president and CEO of NEFE. "We have an opportunity to dramatically affect the quality of K-12 financial education by providing teachers with the subject matter expertise they need." WINDEBT Collection SystemThe leader in Windows based collection software for Agency, DebtBuyers, DebtSellers and In-House operations. Teachers' Background Only 37 percent of K-12 teachers had taken a college course offering personal finance content. The study found that having taken a college course in personal finance is a major predictor of teachers feeling competent to teach personal finance. Because a certification or specific training to teach financial education currently does not exist in most regions, teachers of family living, business education, and social studies, (where personal finance traditionally is taught) are the ones most commonly teaching it today. However, math teachers, who are less likely than teachers in these fields to have taken personal finance courses, are also incorporating financial examples in their teaching. Most teachers engaged in providing financial education report that they integrate financial education topics into regularly offered credit courses, rather than offering separate, stand-alone courses. The study showed that K-12 teachers and prospective teachers are acquiring very little additional formal education in personal finance, either through credit-based courses or non-credit offerings. In addition, only a few teachers and a handful of prospective teachers had completed any formal course work in educational methods for teaching financial education. Only 11 percent of K-12 teachers had taken a workshop on teaching personal finance. "Our research shows that teachers are open to integrating financial education into their curriculum. But they need help with tailoring the content to their discipline," says Holden. "Helping teachers learn how to include financial literacy concepts into other disciplines—such as math, consumer education, or language arts—is a way to expand financial education throughout the curriculum." State Standards Today, 44 states have adopted personal financial education standards or guidelines (according to the Council on Economic Education 2009 Survey of the States). Given this growth in support for financial education, researchers Way and Holden expected that these educational policies would have some influence on whether teachers had taken or taught a course related to financial education, or felt competent to teach these topic areas. However, the study found no influence of state mandates on whether a teacher had taken a course in personal finance, taught a course, or felt competent to teach a course. In fact, over 60 percent of teachers and prospective teachers said they do not feel qualified to teach their state's financial education standards. And teacher education faculty in those states were no more familiar with state financial education standards than K-12 teachers themselves. "This lack of influence of state mandates on teacher education implies that there are a lot of opportunities for improvement in the financial education we provide both pre-service and in-service teachers to meet their personal and professional needs," says Way. As states increasingly call for more attention to curricula and/or testing in personal finance, the data suggest that much work needs to be done to ensure that these standards are incorporated into the curriculum for prospective teachers and that K-12 teachers get the training they need to use the standards. For an executive summary or to read the complete Teachers' Background & Capacity to Teach Personal Finance study, click here. The National Endowment for Financial Education is an independent nonprofit organization committed to educating Americans about personal finance and empowering them to make positive and sound decisions to reach financial goals. For more information, visit www.nefe.org. Be the First To Comment(Please read our comments policy first.) Five Filters featured article: The Art of Looking Prime Ministerial - The 2010 UK General Election. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
| Three personal finance blogs to watch - Livemint.com Posted: 06 May 2010 09:13 AM PDT [fivefilters.org: unable to retrieve full-text content] A recent poll conducted by CNNMoney.com found that 34% of the people relied upon the media to make their money decisions. The rest of the pie was scattered between friends, family and advisers. Media, in a an Internet world, now includes a new ... |
| Personal Finance: Frugality Forever - Washington Post Posted: 06 May 2010 09:48 AM PDT In an Associated Press survey, 44 leading economists were asked whether the recession created a "new frugality" and if that mindset will continue after the recession. A majority said saving is here to stay. At the height of the savings boom last year, people saved 6.4 percent of their disposable income compared with less than 1 percent before the recession hit. "Consumers will not run up multiple credit cards to their limits, and when buying a house the objective will not be to get the maximum square footage for which they can afford the payment," said Sean Snaith, an economics professor at the University of Central Florida. "A higher savings rate will be in place for several years." 3-D Dollars I enjoyed watching the movie "How To Train Your Dragon." My kids liked the movie too. And we didn't see it in 3-D. Nope, we saved the money and put it toward popcorn. (Yes, people as frugal as I am I do splurge on the movie popcorn, but I bring baggies so we take advantage of the free refills for the super tub.) From HD to Blu-Ray, there's a constant evolution of new technology that is supposed to provide a more lively and personal cinematic experience. But is that experience really worth the extra dollars? Roger Ebert, a film critic for the Chicago Sun Times, doesn't think so. In a Newsweek column, Why I Hate 3-D (And You Should Too), Ebert says, "It adds nothing essential to the moviegoing experience." I especially agree because of the added cost seeing movies in 3D. Ebert explains that the 3D craze is "driven largely to sell expensive projection equipment and add a $5 to $7.50 surcharge on already expensive movie tickets," Ebert writes. Online shopping fee A new bill is looking to lay claim to the millions of dollars in online sales taxes, reports Ylan Q. Mui in Cash-strapped states go online, hoping to tax sales. At stake is not only the small discount that many shoppers enjoy, reports Mui, but the low-price business model that fueled the explosive transformation of Amazon and Overstock.com into giants of the $130 billion e-commerce industry. Five Filters featured article: The Art of Looking Prime Ministerial - The 2010 UK General Election. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
| HelloWallet Nabs $3.6 Million From Steve Case And ... - TechCrunch Posted: 06 May 2010 07:54 AM PDT
Similar to Mint, HelloWallet helps users track and proactively manage their personal finances. But HelloWallet aims to be a full-service financial advisor, and looks forward to proactively uncover savings opportunities and potential threats for its members. Additionally, HelloWallet does not allow banks to advertise or promote products, so its recommendations claim to be untouched by any business interests. The startup plans to use the fund to further product development and build out its businesses development team. HelloWallet's team of consumer finance experts have developed a platform that helps users set and reach specific financial short- and long-term goals for important life milestones including buying a home, saving for retirement, reducing debt safely, and saving for college. For example, HelloWallet stores tuition information for nearly every college and university across the country, and models the tuition out to a users' expected enrollment date. The service is then able to make specific recommendations for the best approach to educational savings, on an individual basis. HelloWallet partners with companies like Ernst & Young, to provide their users and clients with its online financial advisory. While HelloWallet costs around $5 per month, the startup is pledging to give a free subscription to one needy family for every five of the site's paying members. And the company has caught to attention of President Bill Clinton, The Rockefeller Foundation and others. Five Filters featured article: The Art of Looking Prime Ministerial - The 2010 UK General Election. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
| You are subscribed to email updates from Personal-Finance - Bing News To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
| Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610 | |


0 comments:
Post a Comment