Personal Financial Literacy Activities for Middle School (2024)

It doesn’t get more real-world in math than Personal Financial Literacy! I appreciate that real life concepts that impact growing teens and adults are incorporated into Texas state standards.

Today, I am sharing ideas that support the personal financial literacy standards for middle school.

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Let’s take a moment to at what is included in the Texas Personal Financial Literacy standards. *The standards below have been edited for conciseness.*

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Comprehensive curriculum that is aligned to the TEKS can be a challenge to find. Fortunately, Maneuvering the Middle has already created the student handouts, homework, study guides, and assessments for this very subject.

In addition, Maneuvering the Middle has already created a variety of activities – scavenger hunts, card sorts, solve and color, online exploration activities, stations, and more to provide practice and keep Personal Financial Literacy engaging.

Think Long-Term

Remember that while we do teach the standards, we can emphasize the most long-term concepts. While sixth grade calls for students to be able to explain the items on a credit report, we really want students to have a great understanding for what a credit report is and how short-term poor decisions can impact us for a long time. In 8th grade, this concept is driven home with the emphasis on ways to save money with interest over time. To me this is a great takeaway for middle schoolers!

Make It Relevant

I appreciate the vertical alignment of specific strands, specifically G and H. Sixth graders look at the larger scope of how career fields impact your lifetime income, 7th graders explore just how expensive it is to maintain a household, and lastly 8th graders are asked to devise a savings plan for college. This strand shows how personal this concept is to students’ futures. This is something that you will use in the real world (*gestures wildly*).

Activities to Try

Dollars and Sense – This free activity is similar to the game of Life. While it isn’t ink friendly, you could laminate and have a class set. Students choose a career, and have various opportunities to flip a coin to either incur a costly expense or financial favor. They decide how to spend and save their money on transportation, clothes, and housing. At the end of the game, they have to fill out a budget based on their choices. This is aligned to 6th, 7th, and 8th grade standards.

Financial Football – This computer-based activity requires students to answer financial multiple-choice questions between plays. The football aspect will engage some students, and it isn’t 100% aligned to one grade level’s standards, but overall, I think this would be a great extension for students over the course of the unit.

Comparing Salaries in Various Fields Project – In this project, students will research and compare annual salaries of various careers requiring different levels of education and calculate the effects of different salaries on lifetime income. The project even allows for a career fair! This project is directly aligned to TEKS 6.14G and 6.14H.

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Real-Life Bills – Similar to Price of Right games, give students a category – water, electricity, cable, phone, rent, groceries, etc – and have groups guess what the average or median cost of those types of bills would be. You can use your own bills as a reference or Google averages in your area.

Household Budgets and Percent Practice – Students will take on the role of an employee working for “Remote Possibilities”, a company that helps clients who work remotely to determine the best location to live based on the client’s income, financial goals, and lifestyle desires. Students will understand and apply concepts of personal budgets and minimum household budgets. This project is directly aligned to TEKS 7.13B and 7.13D.

Planning and Saving for College Project – Students will take on the role of a financial advisor working for Scholarly Savers, a company that counsels families through various financial situations. Students will research the cost of colleges and create a savings plan for a fictional client. This project is directly aligned to TEKS 8.12G and 8.12C.

EMPHASIZE VOCABULARY

When writing the units and really digging into the standards, I was blown away by the level of new concepts and terms that are introduced. Ask students to use the academic vocabulary, and spend a few minutes at the beginning of each class reviewing. To spice it up, you could do a quick fly-swatter game, Quizizz, or Kahoot.

The 6th grade standards have 10 new vocabulary words introduced! For comparison, most units average around 5.

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Common Misconceptions

Overall, I think the biggest challenge is that while these terms are familiar to us as adults, they are foreign to students. Credit reports? Grants? Work-study? Like I said before, this unit is probably the most vocabulary dense unit in middle school math.

  • Grants are needs-based, while scholarships are needs- and merit-based
  • Confusing total value with interest in the compound interest formula
  • Confusing the terms “assets” and “liabilities” on a net worth statement
  • A debit card is different that than the verb, “debit”

Anchor Chart

Anchor charts are fabulous ways to showcase the content in a visual manner for students to reference. They can easily be created before the lesson or as you are teaching, depending on the content.

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Do you have any other great ideas for teaching the personal financial literacy standards?

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Maneuvering the Middle has been publishing blog posts since 2014. This post was originally published in March 2018. It has been updated for relevance and clarity.

Personal Financial Literacy Activities for Middle School (2024)

FAQs

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

Character, capital (or collateral), and capacity make up the three C's of credit. Credit history, sufficient finances for repayment, and collateral are all factors in establishing credit. A person's character is based on their ability to pay their bills on time, which includes their past payments.

What is the golden rule of financial literacy? ›

The key is to prioritize saving.

Start small - aim for 10% of your income each month. Think of it like paying yourself first! Allocate the rest towards expenses, debt payments (if any), and additional savings or investments.

What are the 4 main 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 does the rule of 72 tell you? ›

Do you know the Rule of 72? It's an easy way to calculate just how long it's going to take for your money to double. Just take the number 72 and divide it by the interest rate you hope to earn. That number gives you the approximate number of years it will take for your investment to double.

What is the p-fin index? ›

The TIAA Institute-GFLEC Personal Finance Index (P-Fin Index) measures knowledge and understanding which enable sound financial decision-making and effective management of personal finances.

What is fin number financial independence? ›

The financial independence number equals annual household spending divided by 4%. This formula serves as the baseline, but most people should consider adjusting the number for their personal situation. To calculate the number, first determine annual spending.

How many questions are on the financial literacy test? ›

View the results of over 93,000 people – representing all 50 US states – who have completed the National Financial Literacy Test, a 30-question test designed to measure participants' ability to earn, save, and grow their money.

Would you rather questions financial literacy? ›

Would you rather be 100 percent debt free or have a good credit score? Would you rather have $1,000,000 now or $50,000 a year for the rest of your life? (assume both sums after taxes) This or that… Would you rather buy a bond at a discount or a premium rate?

What should be taught in a financial literacy class? ›

Example of Financial Literacy

Understanding concepts such as credit cards, bank accounts, interest rates, opportunity costs, debt management, compound interest, and budgets, for example, could help her students start saving and manage the student loans that they might rely on to fund their college education.

What are the financial topics in school? ›

General standards that break financial literacy up into six major topics: earning income; buying goods and services; saving; using credit; investing; protecting and insuring.

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