By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- When the Mississippi Legislature passed a law last
year requiring high schoolers be taught money management,
Mississippi State University's Extension Service stepped in
to help make this happen. The High
School Financial Planning Program in Mississippi was offered
to school districts to help them comply with a law passed in
1999. This law requires all public school districts to teach
personal finances courses. MSU's Extension Service is
providing the training for the teachers who will present
this material. Jan
Lukens, Extension personal finance specialist, said a
10-location, statewide video conference is scheduled for
June 8 to offer this training. Additional program and
personal finance training will be available on the Internet
for teachers from July to December. "Mississippi
is one of the first states to require personal finance
education to be offered at every school district," Lukens
said. "The distance learning teacher training is a pilot
program that other states are looking at as they prepare
their own high school money management programs." MSU's
Extension Service offers training with support from MSU
Banking Excellence, the State Department of Education,
Consumer Credit Counseling Service, Colorado State
University, the Credit Union National Association and the
National Endowment for Financial Education. Extension
received a National Endowment for Financial Education grant
that will cover the cost of the video conferencing
technicians and the teachers' continuing education
fees. Lukens
said in addition to providing the teacher training,
Extension agents will also be available in the counties to
assist any districts with these money management classes.
After the teleconference, an Internet course will be offered
to provide teachers with more advanced teaching skills and
further continuing education credits. Julie
McAdory, branch manager of Consumer Credit Counseling
Service in Hattiesburg, is responsible for raising awareness
of students' lack of understanding of money management. Her
efforts led to the law requiring this information be taught
in Mississippi high schools. "We want
students to become better informed, more responsible
consumers," McAdory said. The idea
for such classes surfaced in January 1998 when speaking with
some university students', McAdory learned that most were
ignorant of such things as credit reports and using credit
cards. She said many had already ruined their
credit. "The
students asked me to do something so that those who follow
will not make the same mistakes they did," McAdory
said. The law
was initially written to require all high school students to
take a personal finance class so that they will have the
skills necessary to handle personal business and finances.
In subcommittee, the law was changed to require all schools
to teach the information, but the classes are
electives. "If the
majority of students are not taking it last fall and this
spring, I will be back in the 2001 legislature introducing
another bill making it mandatory that our students take
personal finance classes," McAdory said. Personal
money management skills are currently being taught as
computation in business, personal finance and survey of math
topics. The High School Financial Planning Program
curriculum was developed by the National Endowment for
Financial Education in Colorado. Specific
topics to be covered include opening a bank account,
balancing a checkbook, managing debt, completing a loan
application, computing income taxes and contesting incorrect
billing statements, as well as understanding the basics of
insurance policies, and consumer rights and
responsibilities. Released:
April 10, 2000
Family,
Youth & Consumer News
State Youth To
Learn Money Skills In School
Contact: Jan Lukens, (228) 388 4710
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:48
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/fcenews/fce00/000410jl.htm
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