Financial goal setting helps young people envision why and what they’re saving for and when they want to achieve it, based on their timeline.
Kids are guided to think about what’s important to them and create SMART goals to define what they want to achieve.
Kids learn the importance of tracking goals to a specific date, or a “time horizon.” The idea that some goals have an immediate time horizon—clothes or the latest tech—while others, like higher education, happen over months and years is reinforced.
Basics for creating and following a budget are introduced to show how to achieve goals while learning how “income - expenses = savings.”
At the heart of all lessons is helping kids think long term about their money. To stay on track to achieve their goals, they have to stay focused and make trade-off spending decisions along the way.
View lesson pages and activities here or download the full Student Workbook. Remember to check the Teaching Guide to know the vocabulary and takeaways for this lesson as well as questions to ask when reviewing concepts with young people.
All materials are free and downloadable PDFs, so you easily use what works for you.
Goal Setting is broken into two lessons:
Better Set a Budget
Now in year seven of secondary school, Nikki learns about SMART goals and analyzes her goal of building a robot for the school science fair. This part of the lesson helps kids focus on setting and achieving short-term goals in the early saving years.
Get the Big Picture
Nikki has just started her last year of university and is going through her decision-making process to invest in herself and continue her education. This second part of the lesson jumps ahead to the future to get kids thinking about goals to aspire to.