68 customizable lessons, aligned with National Standards, exams and more.
Read NGPF's school-by-school analysis of financial education in America today
Activities
Advocacy
Behavioral Economics
Best Of
Budgeting
Buying a Car
Career
Checking
Consumer Skills
Credit
Cryptocurrencies
Current Events
Curriculum Announcements
Economics
Entrepreneurship
Edpuzzle
ELL Resources
FinCap Friday
Gambling and Sports Betting
Insurance
Interactive
Investing
Math
Paying for College
Philanthropy
Podcasts
Press Releases
Professional Development
Question of the Day
Savings
So Expensive Series
Taxes
Teacher Talk
If you've been a long-time member of the NGPF community, you probably recall when Investing was a unit tucked deep into the latter half of all of our courses. It's an advanced topic, and so went with the strategy of laying out ALL the fundamentals (checking, saving, budgeting, ...) before we tackled investing. But, not anymore! In the newly revamped Semester Course, we moved Investing the whole way up to the three-spot, and here are three reasons why: A) It's a high-interest topic amongst teens, so let's hit them early in the course to hook them in. B) It's the next step after saving -- why save when you can compound that growth with investing? C) When it comes to investing, start sooner rather than later! Time is in your favor, and teaching it early allows you to circle back throughout the whole rest of the course. The Semester Course Investing unit is LONG, and here's what you need to know.
The first five lessons lay the foundations. First up, WHY investing is so important, followed by lessons on the stock markets, stocks, bonds, and mitigating risk using diversification. The first lesson also touches on the differences between saving, investing, and trading. The second lesson includes an awesome Edpuzzle about the stock market, but if you're looking for additional classroom challenges on the same content, FinCap Friday: The Raging Bull is also an outstanding choice.
Once your students know the basic investment types like stocks and bonds, the next few lessons of Semester Course Investing tackle trickier investment products and options. Here's the breakdown:
Eleven lessons is what we felt was necessary to do ALL these investing topics justice, but we also realize that might feel like a little too much for your students or even for you as the teacher! If you're trying to trim down this unit, you'll likely want to play STAX only once, not twice. We'd recommend keeping lessons 1- 7, and then cutting the last four lessons. You could also take the beginning of lesson 6 (active vs passive), cut the lesson 6 MOVE activity (even though students really DO tend to love the MOVEs), and do the first part of Lesson 7 on mutual and index funds, skipping ETFs and TDFs.
NGPF has recently released a brand new arcade game called Crypto Craze, which is part of our Cryptocurrency mini unit. That said -- it's important that students know how investing and trading crypto are different, especially when it comes to risk profiles, which is why we recommend teaching Investing before Crypto for sure!
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When I started working at Next Gen Personal Finance, it's as though my undergraduate degree in finance, followed by ten years as an educator in an NYC public high school, suddenly all made sense.
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