To build essential money management skills and financial understanding in young learners through engaging, age-appropriate activities that make financial concepts easy and fun to grasp.
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Day 1 – Earning Money
Students learn about different types of money used around the world and the many ways people can earn it. Through role-playing different professions, they explore how work leads to earning money.
Day 2 – Saving Money
Students understand why saving is important for future needs and emergencies. They participate in a budgeting game that challenges them to decide how much money to save versus spend.
Day 3 – Spending Smart
This lesson focuses on how and why people spend money on goods and services. Students practice smart spending by sorting expenses into necessary and unnecessary categories.
Day 4 – Making Choices and Opportunity Cost
Students explore the idea that every financial choice comes with trade-offs. A decision-making game helps them understand how to weigh needs against wants.
Day 5 – Budgeting
Students learn what a budget is and how it helps manage money wisely. They create a simple budget based on a real-life scenario, developing their planning skills.
Day 6 – Introduction to Banks and Terminologies
This session introduces the role of banks and basic financial terms. Students play a matching game to connect common banking terms with their meanings.
Day 7 – Bank Services and Functions
Students explore different services offered by banks, such as savings accounts, loans, and online banking. A virtual bank visit helps them understand how these services function.
Day 8 – Debit Cards and Credit Cards
Students learn the difference between debit and credit cards, including how each allows people to spend money. They compare scenarios to understand the benefits and risks of both.
Day 9 – Consumers
This day is about understanding the different types of buyers—individuals and businesses. Students play a comparison game that challenges them to make smart consumer choices.
Day 10 – Project Time
To wrap up the course, students create a financial adventure story based on a fictional character’s financial choices. A banking simulation is used to illustrate how financial systems support everyday decisions.