Charles Schwab Foundation Rolls Out Innovation
Awards for Creative Delivery of Financial Education at
Select Boys & Girls Clubs
Imaginative Tactics Engage Teens in the Money Matters: Make It
CountSM Program
San
Francisco -- Oct. 29, 2009
-- In a
quest to uncover new and engaging ways to make learning about money
management compelling and meaningful to today’s youth, Charles Schwab
Foundation has announced the first annual winners of the Money
Matters Innovation Awards. Five winning Boys &
Girls Clubs, all of which offer the Money Matters program, were
selected from approximately 100 competing Clubs across the country’s
five geographic regions. The winners, which each will receive a $3,000
grant, are:
-
Boys & Girls Club
of East Aurora (N.Y.),
-
The Salvation Army
Boys & Girls Club of Charlotte (N.C.),
-
Boys & Girls Club
of Evansville (Ind.),
-
Boys & Girls Club
of Collin County (Texas), and
-
Boys & Girls Club
of King County (Wash.).
While each winning Club employs different strategies and tactics to
teach critical personal finance skills, a common theme for all involves
reaching outside the framework of the basic Money Matters
financial education curriculum to encourage hands-on, experiential
learning. The different approaches include simulation of real-life
financial decision-making, entrepreneurism and community involvement,
local business participation in the program, and family outreach and
involvement.
For example, the Boys & Girls Club of East Aurora has created
its own “bank” and provides each teen participant with $1 as “seed
money” and a checkbook complete with check register and deposit slips.
When the teens wish to purchase something from the Club’s snack bar,
they are encouraged to write a check as payment -- provided they have the
funds in their account to cover it. As a group, the kids learn to
reconcile bank statements created by the Club with their own personal
check registers. The Collin County Club similarly has its own currency,
called “smart bucks” that kids can earn in a variety of ways and spend
in the Club’s “Buck Store.” They also have the ability to save their
smart bucks (and earn interest on them).
At
the Boys & Girls Club of King County, a Micro Society program
enables teens to create their own city-society within the Club’s walls
and serves as an umbrella for multiple club programs including Money
Matters.
“This entrepreneurial playground gives our youth experience in running a
business, participating in government and taking leadership roles in the
community, and it motivates them to develop skills that prepare them for
success in school, work and life,” said Chief Professional Officer
Daniel Johnson. “Financial education is a big part of that. Youth learn
in a safe setting how financial decisions can have a real positive or
negative effect on every aspect of their community. Money Matters
is the backbone of the Micro Society program.”
Community and family involvement are other important elements for two of
the winning Clubs. The Salvation Army Boys & Girls Club of Charlotte and
the Boys & Girls Club of Collin County aim to
involve the whole family in Money Matters in order to strengthen
the foundation of learning for the kids. Sessions for parents are
offered in addition to those for the teens, covering topics such as
renting vs. owning a home, choosing a bank, the importance of credit
scores, budgeting, and credit card use.
Community partnership is the key to success for the Evansville Boys &
Girls Club. Employees of Old National Bank teach the Money Matters
sessions, and each teen who successfully completes the program receives
a savings account at the bank, pre-funded with ten dollars to get them
started on a healthy saving habit.
“This partnership has proven to be a very effective way to break down
barriers in both directions,” said Ron Ryan, chief professional officer
at the Club. “Participants gain a sense of trust for the bank and its
employees, and the bank employees gain insight into the lives of teens
living in poverty and the challenges they face in becoming productive,
responsible adults. Through the entire interactive relationship-building
and education process, everyone involved benefits from this unique
experience.”
“Even the best financial education curriculum needs to incorporate
creative ways to deepen impact with young people,” said Carrie Schwab-Pomerantz,
president of Charles Schwab Foundation. “The Innovation Awards have
helped identify meaningful, new ways to reach teens and bring financial
education to life. That’s what’s most important: making the lessons fun
and real so that these kids gain the knowledge and skills they’ll need
to make good financial decisions throughout their lives.”
About Money Matters: Make It Count
Funded by Charles Schwab Foundation, Boys & Girls Clubs of America’s
Money Matters program is designed to promote money management skills
among teens, ages 13-18. The program consists of fun, interactive
activities and exercises on topics such as using a checking account,
managing debt, saving for college and learning the basics of investing.
The program is targeted primarily at teens from underserved communities
and complements other Boys & Girls Club youth development programming.
Nearly 180,000 youth at approximately 1,500 teen Boys & Girls Clubs
across the U.S. have participated in Money Matters since the
program’s launch in mid-2004. In addition, over the past five years,
Charles Schwab Foundation has presented a cumulative total of $300,000
in scholarships to 147 Club teens who completed Money Matters and
demonstrated exceptional financial skills from their newly acquired
knowledge of personal finance.
About Boys & Girls Clubs of America
For more than 100 years, Boys & Girls Clubs of America (www.bgca.org)
has been changing and saving young lives, providing hope and opportunity
for kids who need them most. Today, some 4,300 Clubs serve some 4.5
million young people through Club membership and community outreach.
Known as The Positive Place for Kids, Boys & Girls Clubs can be found
all across the country and on U.S. military bases throughout the world.
Clubs provide young people 6-18 years old with guidance-oriented
character development programs conducted by trained, professional staff.
In communities large and small, Clubs positively impact lives and help
young people reach their full potential as productive, caring citizens.
Key Boys & Girls Club programs emphasize leadership development;
education and career exploration; community service; financial literacy;
health and life skills; the arts; sports, fitness and recreation; and
family outreach. In a recent Harris Survey of Club alumni, 57 percent
said the Club saved their life. National headquarters are located in
Atlanta.
About Charles Schwab Foundation
Charles Schwab
Foundation is a private, nonprofit organization funded by the Charles
Schwab Corporation. Its mission is to create positive change through
financial education, philanthropy, and volunteerism. More information is
available at
www.aboutschwab.com/community.
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