By
Keryn B. Page MISSISSIPPI
STATE --
Efforts
to increase financial literacy among Mississippi's high
school students are beginning to pay off. National
surveys were conducted in 1997, 2000, 2002 and 2004 for the
Jump$tart Coalition for Personal Financial Literacy by Lewis
Mandell, a professor of finance at the University of Buffalo
School of Management. The survey demonstrates students'
aptitude and ability to manage financial resources such as
credit cards, insurance, retirement funds and savings
accounts. To have
state-specific information included in the results, at least
10 randomly selected schools are required to participate in
the survey. Mississippi's results were included in the
report for the first time this year, along with those of 11
other states that met the survey requirements. The
results show Mississippi's high school seniors answered 53.3
percent of financial questions correctly, compared to a
national average of 52.3 percent. "Mississippi
is witnessing an improvement in student achievement
regarding life skills needed to make good, sound,
responsible financial decisions," said Julie McAdory,
Mississippi Jump$tart state president. "Unfortunately, from
a national perspective, the average grade scored by students
is still disappointingly low." Key to
helping students increase their financial literacy is to
continue offering courses in schools that emphasize the
importance of goal-setting, budgeting, saving and other
principles of the financial planning process. "The
best way to increase financial literacy is to educate in
communities and in schools," said Susan Cosgrove, family
resource management agent with the Mississippi State
University Extension Service. "We need to teach parents
basic personal financial literacy so they can help their
children learn these lessons." Jump$tart
offers Money Matters seminars that train Mississippi high
school teachers to provide personal finance instruction in
their classrooms. Cosgrove said interest is high among
teachers of all disciplines. Eleventh- and 12th-grade
students also attend these Money Matters seminars, where
they hear about various financial issues from
speakers. "The
MSU Extension Service offers resources that teachers in all
grades and many subjects can incorporate into their classes,
especially math, business, economics, social studies and
computer classes," Cosgrove said. "Teachers need more than a
lecture and a textbook to keep the students' attention, so
we offer interactive resources with great activities to
conduct in the classroom." The
Jump$tart survey, conducted in December, January and
February, is a written 45-minute examination administered to
4,074 seniors in 215 high schools across the United States.
The survey's underwriter was Merrill Lynch. The
questionnaire revealed a positive impact on students
attending required money management courses in high school.
Of those students who took a full semester of money
management courses, the students who were required to take
the classes scored better (54.1 percent) than those who took
the classes as electives (52.7 percent). "It's
great that Congress is requiring students be offered
personal finance classes, but we also need legislation that
requires personal finance classes be taught -- not just
offered -- to every Mississippi student," Cosgrove said.
"There's a big difference in simply offering a course and
requiring that it be taken." The
survey results show factors that affect personal financial
literacy in young people. For instance, the students
surveyed indicated they learn most of their money management
skills from their parents. Of the students surveyed, 58.3
percent said skills are learned at home, versus 19.5 percent
who said they learn such skills at school and 17.6 percent
from experience. Students
whose parents have college degrees performed better, as did
students who plan to attend college themselves. Students who
said they had a savings and/or checking account with a bank
also scored higher (55.5 percent) than students without any
bank account (47.4 percent). Gender
played virtually no role in performance. Race and
geographical region, however, did play a role: the average
score for Caucasian students was 55.5 percent, compared to
48.3 percent for Asian Americans, 48.3 percent for
Hispanics, 46.7 percent for Native Americans and 44 percent
for African Americans. Students from the Northeast scored
higher (56.5 percent) than students from the Midwest (52.4
percent), the West (52.2 percent) and the South (49.9
percent). Released:
May 6, 2004
Family,
Youth & Consumer News
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Mississippi
students beat national scores for
financial literacy
Contact: Susan Cosgrove, (601) 635-2268
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:29:08
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