Many parents aren’t sure where to begin when it comes to teaching their teens and young adults about finances. Christian Finance for Teens will help, giving important information in a way teens can understand about job searching, budgeting, debt, banking, investing, insurance, taxes, and other areas of finance. Author Cindy Kersey has taught a high school finance class (Christian Finance) for tenth- and twelfth-grade students for several years, “road-testing” her material on real-world teens to amazing results. Inspired to help other young people, she turned her course curriculum into book format so teens and young adults everywhere can easily understand concepts of personal finance. This material will be useful as they begin their lives as adults.
In this new book, you will learn how to get and manage credit, make and stick to a budget, save for college, determine your needs versus your wants, pay for a car, finance college, manage risk, open a bank account, write a check, balance a checkbook, avoid the pressures of consumerism, and how to avoid financial mistakes. You will also learn about investment options, taxes, checks, debit cards, credit cards, and basic budget tips. This book is filled with suggestions from financial and family counselors, and you will discover creative ways to get a jumpstart on your financial future and use money responsibly. Even if you have had a few missteps along the way, you will be able to learn from your mistakes and get on the path to financial well-being.
This straightforward guide provides the fundamental information teens need to know about money matters. This second edition of Personal Finance for Teens shows readers the keys to crafting job-winning resumes, creating a successful spending plan, evaluating college financial aid, managing credit scores and avoiding credit card debt, evaluating the cost of car ownership, and starting retirement savings. In this book teens will find the vital personal finance information they need to know as they transition to living away from home.
A modern primer on consumer finance and personal money management intended for readers aged 15 to 30, this guide can also serve as a primary text for high school, college, or adult education courses on personal finance. There is growing awareness that teaching consumers more about finance is an urgent national priority—and that their education should begin early. Combining practical advice with targeted information on virtually every aspect of personal finance and money management, this book is the ideal resource for young people who want to start off their financial lives properly. The guide updates traditional personal finance topics, such as budgeting, credit, debt, savings, and investment, and goes beyond those fundamentals to furnish important life lessons on such concerns as career planning, starting a business, Internet fraud, and avoiding financial scams. It even provides useful background on the tax system, how to avoid bankruptcy, legal issues young adults often face, and the plethora of government benefits they can access. In fact, young readers will come away from this book with basic knowledge of every important area of personal finance. Ideal for teens and young adults, the volume will prove useful to parents who want to educate their children about the wise use of money, preparing them to make independent financial decisions. In addition, this book can be used to meet the standards enacted in every state for developing a curriculum guide for teaching financial literacy to high school students. It can also serve as a primary or supplementary resource in personal finance or consumer economics courses for college students and adults.
From one of the worlds most trusted experts on personal finance comes a "route planner," identifying easy moves to get young people on the road to financial recovery and within reach of their dreams.
This Unique Textbook Trains High-Achieving Teens and Young Adults in Personal Finance and Career Skills at a Very Sophisticated Level The author is Dr. Joetta Forsyth, a Harvard Ph.D. and Harvard Business School graduate. She is currently a professor of finance at Pepperdine University. This textbook provides high-achieving teens and young adults the tools to: Have sophisticated conversations with financial advisors. Understand most loans as well as any consumer loan officer. Do detailed financial planning and forecasting in Excel. Know how to build wealth for retirement. Start their career off on the right foot when they graduate from college. Become wise at an early age about spending. Anticipate financial risk and avoid financial pressures, reducing the likelihood of divorce. Homeschoolers will find this textbook to be ideal for fostering learning between parent and child. Parents will want to use this book as a powerful personal finance reference. The chapters on financing college, mortgages, and retirement are especially helpful. The textbook is customized for bright young adults, ideally in their last two years of high school or first two years of college. It starts with beginning basics, but quickly moves into advanced concepts. It has fun, fascinating, stories from life throughout, that will instill street smarts and help the student absorb the material. Colorful pictures and graphics enhance the learning process. The result is a highly educational, entertaining, and carefully crafted subject matter, designed to "tune up" young people in anticipation of adulthood. Most college-level finance textbooks cost well over $200. We are delighted to offer ours for only $87.99."
Despite spending enormous amounts of time on core subjects such as math and science, American students are consistently left out when it comes to financial literacy. In the vast majority of the United States, there is virtually no requirement for high school students to acquire skills related to personal finance. This inadequacy has left most students in the dark when it comes to these crucial skills and has consequently jeopardized the financial future of millions. As students transition from primary education to adulthood, these students end up lost and confused with regard to their finances, creating poor habits that can plague them for the rest of their lives. As teenagers who once lacked exposure to financial education themselves, Avaniko Asokkumar, Sai Bommineni, and Rohit Chakka hope to reverse this trend through writing this guide. By breaking down complex financial topics from investing in bonds to planning for retirement in a simple and relatable way, the authors hope to provide a rich and deep understanding of personal finance to all readers. The information present in the novel's six major sections: Financial Planning; Banking, Loaning, and Credit; Investment Basics; Career-Oriented Finance; End Game Finance; and Miscellaneous Finance, will provide a strong baseline of financial education for readers that they can build on going forward. Ultimately, the authors aspire to provide young readers with practical financial knowledge. By internalizing the concepts presented in this novel, teenagers can leave with skills they will utilize for the rest of their lives.
Provides a basic understanding of the purpose of money and explains stewardship, money, attitude, planning, banking, spending, careers, and more by using the Bible as the plan.