How to School Kids on Money Lessons During the COVID-19 Outbreak – Kinston Free Press

Posted: April 18, 2020 at 6:44 pm

Due to COVID-19-related school closures, parents are stretched thin. And while it may not be possible to follow your child's lesson plans to the letter, having your kids at home more

Due to COVID-19-related school closures, parents are stretched thin. And while it may not be possible to follow your child's lesson plans to the letter, having your kids at home more than usual provides a chance to show them how you make day-to-day financial decisions.

The in-home isolation can be difficult. But games, activities, family competitions and even just honest conversations can impart crucial life skills kids will need as they get older and gain greater financial independence.

Pocket change is a powerful learning tool. Even very young children can learn the name and appearance of each kind of coin. As they get older, they can begin putting combinations of coins together.

Michele Hansen of Arlington, Virginia, uses coins to teach her 6-year-old daughter.

'She emptied out our piggy bank of spare change and made a dollar with different combinations of coins,' she says. 'We also did a little foreign exchange with coins left over from past trips. Using coins made it easy for her to visualize it.'

Even if you shop online now for meals or groceries, or leave your kids at home when you go to the supermarket, you can use the experience to teach budgeting and comparison shopping, while reinforcing math skills.

Deanna Hurn, founder of Miracle Math Coaching in Fairfield, California, recommends letting your kids pick a meal they want this week and having them create the shopping list. Set a budget and have them peruse your grocery store's website. But don't let them put items into a shopping cart and have the website do the math for them just yet " instead, ask them to write down each item and its price. Encourage them to compare brands and tell you why they're picking one brand over the other. Once their list is complete, they can manually add up the total cost of all the items.

Your kids will learn how to identify the cost per unit, how to maximize a budget, and even how many items to buy to last a certain amount of time. If you have more than one child, have them compete to see who can come under budget by the highest margin. At the end, put all the items in the shopping cart and see what the final price is once taxes and delivery costs get factored in.

A few years ago, Hurn turned a too-high water bill into a budgeting lesson. She showed the bill to her children and explained the fixed costs (taxes and fees) and variable costs (water use). It led to a discussion about what actions they could all take to lower their water usage.

But it also introduced a lesson in identifying ways to save money. While your rent or mortgage payment may stay the same, you can try to reduce your electricity use by turning off lights when you're not in the room, or your grocery bill by shopping carefully. 'If you know what you can control and what you can't control, you know how to budget,' Hurn says.

'One important thing to remember is that kids are watching you when you think they aren't,' Ng says. They can see if your bills pile up, they can hear if you fight about money. Being honest with kids in age-appropriate ways can provide reassurance when times are tough. You don't have to be a money expert to be a positive example for your kids, either.

'It's totally OK not to have the answers and to learn together,' Ng says. 'It's good for your kids to see that learning about finances can be a lifelong thing.'

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Sara Rathner is a writer at NerdWallet. Email: srathner@nerdwallet.com. Twitter: @sarakrathner.

The article How to School Kids on Money Lessons During the COVID-19 Outbreak originally appeared on NerdWallet.

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How to School Kids on Money Lessons During the COVID-19 Outbreak - Kinston Free Press

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