How to Trim Semester Course for Shorter Time Frames
Sure, NGPF offers high school personal finance courses for a Trimester and a Full Year, but the real magic happens in our flagship Semester Course. If you want to make sure you're using the best of the best lessons but don't have time for the full Semester Course, here are our recommendations for trimming Semester Course.
Suggestion 1: Just the basics
Focus on the most immediately useful topics for young people, skipping the more advanced topics or skills they'll need later in life.
Keep | Skip |
Banking | Behavioral Econ |
Types of Credit | Investing |
Managing Credit | Insurance |
Paying for College | Taxes |
Consumer Skills |
Budgeting |
Career |
Suggestion 2: Skip units your school addresses elsewhere
Maybe you're one of the lucky schools with a whole semester devoted to Investing -- you could skip that unit. Here are some other questions you could ask:
- Does your school have a college advisement office, a dynamic set of guidance counselors, and/or a course devoted to college readiness? You may be able to skip Paying for College and/or Career.
- Do most of your students have plans other than a 4-year college? If so, make Paying for College an independent study and/or substitute in the NGPF Mini-unit Alternatives to 4-Year Colleges
- Do many of your same students take Family and Consumer Science courses? If so, you may be able to skip Budgeting and/or Consumer Skills.
- Does every senior have an advisory, senior seminar, or "adulting" style course? If so, check the syllabus and see what's covered there so you don't duplicate.
Suggestion 3: Align to standards
If you teach according to the National Standards for Personal Financial Education, the best aligned units would look roughly like this:
NATIONAL STANDARD | SEMESTER COURSE UNIT(S) |
Earning Income | Taxes; Paying for College - lesson 1; Career - lessons 1, 2, 5 |
Spending | Budgeting - lessons 1, 2, 3, 7; Consumer Skills |
Saving | Banking - lessons 2, 5, 6; Investing - lesson 10 |
Investing | Investing |
Managing Credit | Types of Credit; Managing Credit; Paying for College |
Managing Risk | Insurance |
And, of course, if your state or district has its own standards it wants you to follow, use the unit plans for all 11 Semester Course units to review the learning objectives of each lesson and decide which you should keep or skip to make sure you're meeting local expectations.
Suggestion 4: Cut individual lessons
One thing that makes NGPF special is our attention to more niche (but important!) topics and our inclusion of interactive, student-led, deep diving activities. But, if you really are short for time, here are some lessons you might start by trimming out:
- Unit 2: Banking - Cut lesson 4 on being unbanked; Choose either lesson 7 or 8 on digital banking
- Unit 3: Investing - Stop after lesson 7 to touch all the fundamentals but skip the strategies
- Unit 4: Types of Credit - Consider cutting Mortgages and/or Predatory Lending
- Unit 8: Insurance - Combine health insurance down to 1 lesson; eliminate lesson 6 on other insurances
- Unit 9: Taxes - Skip lesson 5, where students practice an entire Form 1040
- Unit 11: Consumer Skills - Skip lessons 2 and 5
Of course, you're welcome to use our Trimester Course instead! It's fully up-to-date and includes many of the same lessons and super engaging activities that Semester Course does.
About the Author
Jessica Endlich
When I started working at Next Gen Personal Finance, it's as though my undergraduate degree in finance, followed by ten years as an educator in an NYC public high school, suddenly all made sense.
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