By Patrick Watson on Tuesday, 18 October 2016
Category: Bite Size Policy

Financial Literacy Education

Financial literacy education became part of the National Curriculum for the first time in September 2014, as part of citizenship education in key stages 3 and 4 (ages 11-16).

The Citizenship programmes of study make provision for pupils in key stage 3 (aged 11-14 years) to be taught about:

And pupils in key stage 4 (aged 14-16 years) to be taught about:

Additionally, the new mathematics curriculum is intended to ensure that 'all young people leave school with an understanding of the mathematics skills needed for personal finance'. As a result, financial literacy has to be taught in local authority maintained schools. However, 64% of secondary schools and around 18% of primary are now Academies, and don't have to follow the National Curriculum (although most do).

A common complaint of employers (and some parents) is that young people leaving school are poorly prepared for the real world; including lacking the ability to make informed decisions about personal finances.

In 2016, a Money Charity Report found that 'financial education had low priority in schools, leading to inadequate resourcing'. The report also claimed that only just over a third of teachers believed colleagues in their school had the skills required to teach financial education.

Financial education can also be taught as part of non-statutory Personal, Social, Health and Economic education (PSHE). Following a review of PSHE, in March 2013 the Coalition Government announced it would remain a non-statutory subject and that no new programmes of study would be published. The Conservative Government has maintained the position that PSHE will not be made statutory and confirmed this stance in February 2016.

The PSHE Association – which was set up in 2006 with government funding to help raise the quality of PSHE teaching – has produced a revised programme of study (non-statutory) for PSHE for pupils in key stages 1 to 4 (ages 5-16).

It proposses that pupils in key stages 1 and 2 (ages 5-11) should be taught about:

And suggests that pupils in key stages 3 and 4 (ages 11-16) should be taught about:

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