68 customizable lessons, aligned with National Standards, exams and more.
Read NGPF's school-by-school analysis of financial education in America today
If you have some time over the holidays, I recommend this 39 minute FT podcast (The Psychology Behind What We Do With Our Money) and accompanying paper: The Psychology and Neuroscience of Financial Decision Making. Why is this worth your time? It provides an fascinating summary of the latest experiments being run to help us understand why we make the money decisions that we do.
Here were some of the interesting tidbits (numbers refer to footnotes cited in the paper):
At the behavioral level, imagining one’s future self through age-progressed facial renderings increased savings behavior in an experiment [23]
The salience of certain attributes on financial statements and contracts 664 Trends in Cognitive Sciences, September 2016, Vol. 20, No. 9 has been shown to affect payday-loan borrowing [30], trading behavior [31,32], and bank account overdrafts [33].
However, the data indicate that most individual investors who trade at all trade too much and lose money by doing so [42]. Such ‘overtrading’ may be driven by overconfidence, in the sense that investors mistakenly believe they have better information than they actually do. Another explanation for the high volume of trade is that investors derive entertainment from doing so. One interesting study shows that speeding tickets (a proxy for sensation seeking) and perceiving one’s intellect to be above actual intellect (a proxy for overconfidence) are associated with higher trading frequency [43].
There is no consensus on why active management is so popular. A plausible psychological principle is that households misunderstand the roles of luck and skill. They expect a fund to perform poorly after a short streak of high returns. When the fund then does well (perhaps luckily), they become mistakenly convinced that the fund’s managers are skilled [14].
_________
Tim's saving habits started at seven when a neighbor with a broken hip gave him a dog walking job. Her recovery, which took almost a year, resulted in Tim getting to know the bank tellers quite well (and accumulating a savings account balance of over $300!). His recent entrepreneurial adventures have included driving a shredding truck, analyzing executive compensation packages for Fortune 500 companies and helping families make better college financing decisions. After volunteering in 2010 to create and teach a personal finance program at Eastside College Prep in East Palo Alto, Tim saw firsthand the impact of an engaging and activity-based curriculum, which inspired him to start a new non-profit, Next Gen Personal Finance.
Activities
Advocacy
Behavioral Economics
Best Of
Budgeting
Career
Checking
Consumer Skills
Credit
Current Events
Curriculum Announcements
Economics
Edpuzzle
ELL Resources
FinCap Friday
Interactive
Insurance
Investing
Math
Paying for College
Press Releases
Podcasts
Podcasts in the Classroom
Professional Development
Question of the Day
Savings
So Expensive Series
Taxes
Join the more than 11,000 teachers who get the NGPF daily blog delivered to their inbox:
MOST POPULAR POSTS
1
Question of the Day: What are the top 3 fastest growing careers that don't need a 4-year degree?
2
Fall 2024 Updates to Paying for College Resources
3
Useful Personal Finance Movies and Documentaries with Worksheets
4
FinCap Friday: FAFSA Fiasco
5
New Fall PD Badges are Here
Awarded one of the Top Personal Finance Blogs
Awarded one of the Best Advocacy Blogs and Websites
Before your subscription to our newsletter is active, you need to confirm your email address by clicking the link in the email we just sent you. It may take a couple minutes to arrive, and we suggest checking your spam folders just in case!
Great! Success message here
New to NGPF?
Save time, increase student engagement, and help your students build life-changing financial skills with NGPF's free curriculum and PD.
1. Sign up for your Teacher Account
2. Explore a unit page
3. Join NGPF Academy
4. Become an NGPF Pro!
Your new account will provide you with access to NGPF Assessments and Answer Keys. It may take up to 1 business day for your Teacher Account to be activated; we will notify you once the process is complete.
Thanks for joining our community!
The NGPF Team
Complete the form below to access exclusive resources for teachers. Our team will review your account and send you a follow up email within 24 hours.
To speed up your verification process, please submit proof of status to gain access to answer keys & assessments.
Acceptable information includes:
Acceptable file types: .png, .jpg, .pdf.
Once you submit this form, our team will review your account and send you a follow up email within 24 hours. We may need additional information to verify your teacher status before you have full access to NGPF.
Take the quiz to quickly find the best resources for you!