The FitMoney curriculum - a K-12 classroom curriculum for personal finance that
includes a game for elementary kids, a junior certificate for middle schoolers
and senior certificate for high schoolers - is exemplary, designed by teachers
for teachers, all digital, inclusive and free to all users. This is a little
nonprofit serving 89,000 and growing very fast, because of partnerships with
American Student Association (we gained 42,000 students in 12 months, 50% from
marginalized communities, 72% girls); 18 Girl Scout Councils; New
Hampshire Learn Everywhere (our high school curriculum earns students credit in
New Hampshire); and the American National Military Family Association.
FitMoney is addressing a massive challenge. While
children form their financial habits at age 7, there are no schools teaching
financial literacy at elementary levels, and only 16.6% of high schools provide
any financial literacy training. With low or no credit score, many living
in marginalized communities experience a widening wealth gap, lower standard of
living, higher debt - impacting their homes, jobs, transportation and
healthcare. As 26 states now mandate teaching financial literacy by
2028, the demand is enormous. FitMoney’s challenge is to grow our
resources and get the word out that we have an exemplary financial literacy
curricula free to all users.
FitMoney is comprised of a warm, inclusive, smart, and fleet
of foot board and staff - unbiased, diverse, welcoming and respectful.
The FitMoney curriculum - a K-12 classroom curriculum for personal finance that
includes a game for elementary kids, a junior certificate for middle schoolers
and senior certificate for high schoolers - is exemplary, designed by teachers
for teachers, all digital, inclusive and free to all users. This is a little
nonprofit serving 89,000 and growing very fast, because of partnerships with
American Student Association (we gained 42,000 students in 12 months, 50% from
marginalized communities, 72% girls); 18 Girl Scout Councils; New
Hampshire Learn Everywhere (our high school curriculum earns students credit in
New Hampshire); and the American National…