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CNBC’s Sharon Epperson Explains Savings to Kids

By Jonathan Burch

Sharon Epperson, a former CEE Board Member and Senior Personal Finance Correspondent for CNBC, recently made a guest appearance on Sprout’s Sunny Side Up Show in a special segment entitled “Sharon Epperson Chats Finance.” In the segment, Ms. Epperson explains how a child can start a savings account with money earned from a lemonade stand.

Watch the clip here:

The post CNBC’s Sharon Epperson Explains Savings to Kids appeared first on Council for Economic Education.

POSTED: June 23, 2015 | BY: brendan

CNBC’s Sharon Epperson Explains Savings to Kids

By Daniel Thompson

Sharon Epperson, a former CEE Board Member and Senior Personal Finance Correspondent for CNBC, recently made a guest appearance on Sprout’s Sunny Side Up Show in a special segment entitled “Sharon Epperson Chats Finance.” In the segment, Ms. Epperson explains how a child can start a savings account with money earned from a lemonade stand.

Watch the clip here:

The post CNBC’s Sharon Epperson Explains Savings to Kids appeared first on Council for Economic Education.

POSTED: June 23, 2015 | BY: brendan

CNBC’s Sharon Epperson Explains Savings to Kids

By Daniel Thompson

Sharon Epperson, a former CEE Board Member and Senior Personal Finance Correspondent for CNBC, recently made a guest appearance on Sprout’s Sunny Side Up Show in a special segment entitled “Sharon Epperson Chats Finance.” In the segment, Ms. Epperson explains how a child can start a savings account with money earned from a lemonade stand.

Watch the clip here:

The post CNBC’s Sharon Epperson Explains Savings to Kids appeared first on Council for Economic Education.

POSTED: June 23, 2015 | BY: brendan

CEE Convenes Meeting with Education Secretary Arne Duncan & the President’s Council for Financial Capability for Young Americans

By Annamarie Cerreta

5d679bc6 d1bd 45f1 8e7a f867db675057 CEE Convenes Meeting with Education Secretary Arne Duncan & the Presidents Council for Financial Capability for Young Americans

CEE continues to explain the compelling need for better economics education at the very highest levels of government and commerce, building support for our programs. Last week, the organization convened Advancing Financial Education in New York City at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, featuring Arne Duncan, Secretary of Education, and John W. Rogers, Chair of the President’s Advisory Council on Financial Capability for Young Americans, together with NYC leaders in economic and financial education and other members of the President’s Council.

Nan J. Morrison, Council for Economic Education, with members of the President’s Advisory Council on Financial Capability for Young Americans (from left to right) – Richard G. Ketchum, FINRA; Amy Rosen, The Public Private Strategy Group; Marc Morial, National Urban League; John W. Rogers, Jr., Ariel Investments; Robert J. Glovsky, The Colony Group; and Jason Young, MindBlown Labs

Here are some of the highlights:

In his opening remarks, Secretary Duncan gave a special “thank you” to the “great teachers” of New York City and around the nation for their work.

We at CEE were thrilled to announce our partnership with Working In Support of Education (W!SE) alongside their President and CEO, Phyllis Frankfort. Students completing missions on our free online personal finance game, Geni Revolution, can now earn a credential by passing the W!SE Financial Literacy Certification exam.

Our discussion centered on the need to scale existing successful programs, and the critical role of private-public partnerships in accomplishing that goal. Contributing to the conversation were Julie Menin, the Commissioner of the NYC Department of Consumer Affairs, who spoke about how NYC is providing financial empowerment to schools and parents, and NYC public school teacher Ruben Rivera, who spoke first-hand of the importance of teaching these essential “life skills.”

9b9c4a80 ff0e 4426 ae16 472670f7e48c CEE Convenes Meeting with Education Secretary Arne Duncan & the Presidents Council for Financial Capability for Young Americans
Panelists (from left to right) Amy Rosen, The Public Private Strategy Group, Member of the President’s Advisory Council on Financial Capability for Young Americans; Commissioner Julie Menin, New York City Department of Consumer Affairs; Eric Contreras, New York City Department of Education; Nan J. Morrison, Council for Economic Education; Dr. Anand Marri, Federal Reserve Bank of New York and Teachers College, Columbia University; and Ruben Rivera, The Urban Assembly Institute of Math & Science for Young Women

The post CEE Convenes Meeting with Education Secretary Arne Duncan & the President’s Council for Financial Capability for Young Americans appeared first on Council for Economic Education.

POSTED: June 15, 2015 | BY: brendan

CEE Convenes Meeting with Education Secretary Arne Duncan & the President’s Council for Financial Capability for Young Americans

By Annamarie Cerreta

5d679bc6 d1bd 45f1 8e7a f867db675057 CEE Convenes Meeting with Education Secretary Arne Duncan & the Presidents Council for Financial Capability for Young Americans

CEE continues to explain the compelling need for better economics education at the very highest levels of government and commerce, building support for our programs. Last week, the organization convened Advancing Financial Education in New York City at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, featuring Arne Duncan, Secretary of Education, and John W. Rogers, Chair of the President’s Advisory Council on Financial Capability for Young Americans, together with NYC leaders in economic and financial education and other members of the President’s Council.

Nan J. Morrison, Council for Economic Education, with members of the President’s Advisory Council on Financial Capability for Young Americans (from left to right) – Richard G. Ketchum, FINRA; Amy Rosen, The Public Private Strategy Group; Marc Morial, National Urban League; John W. Rogers, Jr., Ariel Investments; Robert J. Glovsky, The Colony Group; and Jason Young, MindBlown Labs

Here are some of the highlights:

In his opening remarks, Secretary Duncan gave a special “thank you” to the “great teachers” of New York City and around the nation for their work.

We at CEE were thrilled to announce our partnership with Working In Support of Education (W!SE) alongside their President and CEO, Phyllis Frankfort. Students completing missions on our free online personal finance game, Geni Revolution, can now earn a credential by passing the W!SE Financial Literacy Certification exam.

Our discussion centered on the need to scale existing successful programs, and the critical role of private-public partnerships in accomplishing that goal. Contributing to the conversation were Julie Menin, the Commissioner of the NYC Department of Consumer Affairs, who spoke about how NYC is providing financial empowerment to schools and parents, and NYC public school teacher Ruben Rivera, who spoke first-hand of the importance of teaching these essential “life skills.”

9b9c4a80 ff0e 4426 ae16 472670f7e48c CEE Convenes Meeting with Education Secretary Arne Duncan & the Presidents Council for Financial Capability for Young Americans
Panelists (from left to right) Amy Rosen, The Public Private Strategy Group, Member of the President’s Advisory Council on Financial Capability for Young Americans; Commissioner Julie Menin, New York City Department of Consumer Affairs; Eric Contreras, New York City Department of Education; Nan J. Morrison, Council for Economic Education; Dr. Anand Marri, Federal Reserve Bank of New York and Teachers College, Columbia University; and Ruben Rivera, The Urban Assembly Institute of Math & Science for Young Women

The post CEE Convenes Meeting with Education Secretary Arne Duncan & the President’s Council for Financial Capability for Young Americans appeared first on Council for Economic Education.

POSTED: June 15, 2015 | BY: brendan

CEE Convenes Meeting with Education Secretary Arne Duncan & the President’s Council for Financial Capability for Young Americans

By Annamarie Cerreta

5d679bc6 d1bd 45f1 8e7a f867db675057 CEE Convenes Meeting with Education Secretary Arne Duncan & the Presidents Council for Financial Capability for Young Americans

CEE continues to explain the compelling need for better economics education at the very highest levels of government and commerce, building support for our programs. Last week, the organization convened Advancing Financial Education in New York City at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, featuring Arne Duncan, Secretary of Education, and John W. Rogers, Chair of the President’s Advisory Council on Financial Capability for Young Americans, together with NYC leaders in economic and financial education and other members of the President’s Council.

Nan J. Morrison, Council for Economic Education, with members of the President’s Advisory Council on Financial Capability for Young Americans (from left to right) – Richard G. Ketchum, FINRA; Amy Rosen, The Public Private Strategy Group; Marc Morial, National Urban League; John W. Rogers, Jr., Ariel Investments; Robert J. Glovsky, The Colony Group; and Jason Young, MindBlown Labs

Here are some of the highlights:

In his opening remarks, Secretary Duncan gave a special “thank you” to the “great teachers” of New York City and around the nation for their work.

We at CEE were thrilled to announce our partnership with Working In Support of Education (W!SE) alongside their President and CEO, Phyllis Frankfort. Students completing missions on our free online personal finance game, Geni Revolution, can now earn a credential by passing the W!SE Financial Literacy Certification exam.

Our discussion centered on the need to scale existing successful programs, and the critical role of private-public partnerships in accomplishing that goal. Contributing to the conversation were Julie Menin, the Commissioner of the NYC Department of Consumer Affairs, who spoke about how NYC is providing financial empowerment to schools and parents, and NYC public school teacher Ruben Rivera, who spoke first-hand of the importance of teaching these essential “life skills.”

9b9c4a80 ff0e 4426 ae16 472670f7e48c CEE Convenes Meeting with Education Secretary Arne Duncan & the Presidents Council for Financial Capability for Young Americans
Panelists (from left to right) Amy Rosen, The Public Private Strategy Group, Member of the President’s Advisory Council on Financial Capability for Young Americans; Commissioner Julie Menin, New York City Department of Consumer Affairs; Eric Contreras, New York City Department of Education; Nan J. Morrison, Council for Economic Education; Dr. Anand Marri, Federal Reserve Bank of New York and Teachers College, Columbia University; and Ruben Rivera, The Urban Assembly Institute of Math & Science for Young Women

The post CEE Convenes Meeting with Education Secretary Arne Duncan & the President’s Council for Financial Capability for Young Americans appeared first on Council for Economic Education.

POSTED: June 15, 2015 | BY: brendan

Financial Literacy: Best way to do it, is to do it.

By Jonathan Burch

Sandy Wheat Financial Literacy: Best way to do it, is to do it.
Ms. Sandy Wheat is the current Executive Director of the North Carolina Council on Economic Education.

Writing in a recent guest column in the Triangle Business Journal, Sandy Wheat quotes Amelia Earhart’s famous quip that “The most effective way to do it, is to do it.”

Likely, Ms. Earhart was referring to aviation; however, as Ms. Wheat concludes in her op-ed the same principle holds true for financial education in her state of North Carolina as well as in the rest of the nation.

Even as the U.S. economy continues its gradual climb out of the Great Recession pit, Financial Education and Literacy remains a pressing issue for U.S. education. Without overly simplifying the causes and perpetuating circumstances that enabled the Recession, American’s lack of financial literacy (i.e. not understanding the risk of loans, taking on credit card debt, no viable budgeting or savings programs, etc.) is at least parallel in responsibility with those other causes.

Given that this is true, then one of the easiest ways to prepare against the next recession is by effectively equipping young Americans with financial literacy.

Ms. Wheat writes that a “recent study found that young adults in three states with a financial education requirement had higher credit scores and fewer credit delinquencies than students in nearby states without.” This is significant news not just for those students but also for the financial and economic institutions of the U.S. It underscores the fact that financial education works.

Ms. Wheat cites a study from 2012 that reveals that while 83 percent of teachers in North Carolina believe that financial education is essential, almost half of those teachers fear that their own financial literacy is too inadequate to be able to teach it.

Unfortunately, even if state legislatures make financial education a requirement, teachers themselves feel as though they are unable to teach.

A byproduct of the Recession has been the tightening of state budgets and in many states, education budgets are the ones getting slashed—meaning that there is little chance for teachers who struggle in financial literacy to even be able to get the training they need to teach.

Thankfully, many private financial institutions are stepping up and volunteering money and personnel to non-profit organizations like the Council for Economic Education which offer numerous teacher conferences, financial education curriculum and resources, connections, and more to both teachers and students across the country.

Basic economics states that people, consciously or otherwise, make all decisions based off of a cost to benefit analysis. Because resources are scarce, businesses very consciously conduct all of their transactions and investments with the idea that what they are investing in will in the long run make them more profitable.

To see these same businesses investing in financial literacy education for teachers and students should illuminate for all critics the importance and value in giving the next generation of Americans the gift of Financial Literacy.

The post Financial Literacy: Best way to do it, is to do it. appeared first on Council for Economic Education.

POSTED: June 2, 2015 | BY: brendan

Financial Literacy: Best way to do it, is to do it.

By Daniel Thompson

Sandy Wheat Financial Literacy: Best way to do it, is to do it.
Ms. Sandy Wheat is the current Executive Director of the North Carolina Council on Economic Education.

Writing in a recent guest column in the Triangle Business Journal, Sandy Wheat quotes Amelia Earhart’s famous quip that “The most effective way to do it, is to do it.”

Likely, Ms. Earhart was referring to aviation; however, as Ms. Wheat concludes in her op-ed the same principle holds true for financial education in her state of North Carolina as well as in the rest of the nation.

Even as the U.S. economy continues its gradual climb out of the Great Recession pit, Financial Education and Literacy remains a pressing issue for U.S. education. Without overly simplifying the causes and perpetuating circumstances that enabled the Recession, American’s lack of financial literacy (i.e. not understanding the risk of loans, taking on credit card debt, no viable budgeting or savings programs, etc.) is at least parallel in responsibility with those other causes.

Given that this is true, then one of the easiest ways to prepare against the next recession is by effectively equipping young Americans with financial literacy.

Ms. Wheat writes that a “recent study found that young adults in three states with a financial education requirement had higher credit scores and fewer credit delinquencies than students in nearby states without.” This is significant news not just for those students but also for the financial and economic institutions of the U.S. It underscores the fact that financial education works.

Ms. Wheat cites a study from 2012 that reveals that while 83 percent of teachers in North Carolina believe that financial education is essential, almost half of those teachers fear that their own financial literacy is too inadequate to be able to teach it.

Unfortunately, even if state legislatures make financial education a requirement, teachers themselves feel as though they are unable to teach.

A byproduct of the Recession has been the tightening of state budgets and in many states, education budgets are the ones getting slashed—meaning that there is little chance for teachers who struggle in financial literacy to even be able to get the training they need to teach.

Thankfully, many private financial institutions are stepping up and volunteering money and personnel to non-profit organizations like the Council for Economic Education which offer numerous teacher conferences, financial education curriculum and resources, connections, and more to both teachers and students across the country.

Basic economics states that people, consciously or otherwise, make all decisions based off of a cost to benefit analysis. Because resources are scarce, businesses very consciously conduct all of their transactions and investments with the idea that what they are investing in will in the long run make them more profitable.

To see these same businesses investing in financial literacy education for teachers and students should illuminate for all critics the importance and value in giving the next generation of Americans the gift of Financial Literacy.

The post Financial Literacy: Best way to do it, is to do it. appeared first on Council for Economic Education.

POSTED: June 2, 2015 | BY: brendan

Financial Literacy: Best way to do it, is to do it.

By Daniel Thompson

Sandy Wheat Financial Literacy: Best way to do it, is to do it.
Ms. Sandy Wheat is the current Executive Director of the North Carolina Council on Economic Education.

Writing in a recent guest column in the Triangle Business Journal, Sandy Wheat quotes Amelia Earhart’s famous quip that “The most effective way to do it, is to do it.”

Likely, Ms. Earhart was referring to aviation; however, as Ms. Wheat concludes in her op-ed the same principle holds true for financial education in her state of North Carolina as well as in the rest of the nation.

Even as the U.S. economy continues its gradual climb out of the Great Recession pit, Financial Education and Literacy remains a pressing issue for U.S. education. Without overly simplifying the causes and perpetuating circumstances that enabled the Recession, American’s lack of financial literacy (i.e. not understanding the risk of loans, taking on credit card debt, no viable budgeting or savings programs, etc.) is at least parallel in responsibility with those other causes.

Given that this is true, then one of the easiest ways to prepare against the next recession is by effectively equipping young Americans with financial literacy.

Ms. Wheat writes that a “recent study found that young adults in three states with a financial education requirement had higher credit scores and fewer credit delinquencies than students in nearby states without.” This is significant news not just for those students but also for the financial and economic institutions of the U.S. It underscores the fact that financial education works.

Ms. Wheat cites a study from 2012 that reveals that while 83 percent of teachers in North Carolina believe that financial education is essential, almost half of those teachers fear that their own financial literacy is too inadequate to be able to teach it.

Unfortunately, even if state legislatures make financial education a requirement, teachers themselves feel as though they are unable to teach.

A byproduct of the Recession has been the tightening of state budgets and in many states, education budgets are the ones getting slashed—meaning that there is little chance for teachers who struggle in financial literacy to even be able to get the training they need to teach.

Thankfully, many private financial institutions are stepping up and volunteering money and personnel to non-profit organizations like the Council for Economic Education which offer numerous teacher conferences, financial education curriculum and resources, connections, and more to both teachers and students across the country.

Basic economics states that people, consciously or otherwise, make all decisions based off of a cost to benefit analysis. Because resources are scarce, businesses very consciously conduct all of their transactions and investments with the idea that what they are investing in will in the long run make them more profitable.

To see these same businesses investing in financial literacy education for teachers and students should illuminate for all critics the importance and value in giving the next generation of Americans the gift of Financial Literacy.

The post Financial Literacy: Best way to do it, is to do it. appeared first on Council for Economic Education.

POSTED: June 2, 2015 | BY: brendan

Laura Overdeck of Bedtime Math Featured in New York Times

By Daniel Thompson

bedtime math e1429890151632 Laura Overdeck of Bedtime Math Featured in New York Times

The New York Times in a recent “Close at Hand” article from their Food section, highlighted Bedtime Math’s founder, Laura Overdeck and her practical yet playful approach to teaching children math.

Mrs. Overdeck who holds a BA in Physics from Princeton has been fascinated with figuring out how mechanical appliances work since her youth. Today, she shares her passion for math with children around the country through her non-profit Bedtime Math.

Mrs. Overdeck designed Bedtime Math to be a fun, interactive educational tool that parents can use to teach math and problem solving skills to their children.

Among Bedtime Math’s many great resources for parents is a trilogy of books which use charming illustrations alongside short problem sets that the kids can work on before they go to bed. Each problem set then has three levels of questions designed for different ages: Wee Ones, Little Kids, and Big Kids.

The Council for Economic Education is happy to work alongside Mrs. Overdeck and Bedtime Math in raising the standards of education in the U.S. CEE’s vision is for children of all ages to get the “math bug” and begin exploring the many wonderful ways in which math effects every area of their life, whether it is building castles out of LEGOs, designing engines for NASA, or simply getting the right amount of eggs and milk into the cake mix.

The post Laura Overdeck of Bedtime Math Featured in New York Times appeared first on Council for Economic Education.

POSTED: May 29, 2015 | BY: brendan