A Website to Teach Your Kids About Money

By Stacey Bradford | Jun 22, 2009 |

Last week I observed a bunch of three-year-olds in my daughter’s preschool class playing a game I’ll call “ATM Machine”. The children basically took turns taking cash out of a book shelf and one boy even managed to position himself as banker. Seeing this little exchange only hammered home the point for me that kids develop a curiosity about money at a very young and it’s never too early to start talking to them about finances.

The trouble is most of us don’t know how to start “the talk” — especially if our own mothers and fathers never had it with us. The problem is so bad that parents tend to feel more comfortable talking to their kids about drugs, alcohol and sex than money, according to a recent survey by Harris Interactive.

In past blog posts I’ve tried to offer some conversation starters by mentioning useful books and websites that can help parents navigate this topic. This morning I came across another resource that you may want to check out. ING DIRECT just redesigned Planet Orange, a site which uses space missions to teach elementary school aged kids about money.

I took a “space mission” of my own earlier today was fairly impressed with the website. The graphics were pretty sophisticated and the site itself offered both learning activities and an arcade with fun games to keep kids with a relatively short attention span fairly engaged.

Planet Orange’s focus is on teaching kids how to earn, spend, save and invest money.  “Young astronauts” learn these valuable lessons by traveling to different space cities where they can earn money by completing educational activities.

While it looks like this is the type of website kids are supposed to use on their own, I actually think it works better — at least in the beginning — if parents play the game with their children and so they can better explain some of the concepts to their little ones.

What I liked: Planet Orange stresses the need to budget and reminds kids that they need to keep earning money for future expanses. It also does a particularly good job giving kids a basic understanding of investing. While they won’t necessarily become little Warren Buffets after this tutorial, they should have a better understanding of what a stock certificate represents and why we buy shares in one company versus another.

What I disliked: I really doubt that any first or second grader is going to fully understand all the concepts that are introduced on the website. I think six and seven-year-olds could use a more basic version of the site. I also believe Planet Orange would benefit from a lesson on giving to charity.

Having said that, Planet Orange is really no different from other educational websites that are out there, whether they teach reading or mathematics. We all know our kids won’t learn to read simply by playing a computer game. The software is best used to reinforce lessons taught by parents and educators. But there’s still a place for them and ING DIRECT’s site, especially if parents don’t know how to broach the money topic.

How do you teach your kids about money? Would you use a website? Or do you prefer more serious conversations around the kitchen table? I’d love to hear your take.

Money image by Digital Sextant, CC 2.0.

 
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  •  
    1

    yalta2

    06/22/09 | Report as spam

    RE: A Website to Teach Your Kids About Money

    Any thoughts on how effective this education is if the parents' actions contradict the site advice? I would use a site to teach them in a heartbeat, but parents needs to understand the site can only do so much. They need to do the rest.

  •  
    2

    Stacey Bradford

    06/22/09 | Report as spam

    RE: A Website to Teach Your Kids About Money

    @yalta2 -- You bring up an excellent point. Kids learn the most about money simply by watching their parents. Mothers and fathers who make bad financial decisions will likely end up with kids who make similar mistakes. The best thing we can do for our children is to set a good example.

  •  
    3

    Richard Eisenberg

    06/23/09 | Report as spam

    RE: A Website to Teach Your Kids About Money

    I've found that when I've tried to "teach" my kids about the
    stock market, mutual funds, 401(k)s, credit, etc., they lost
    interest. But when I snuck in teachable moments during
    everyday life, they seemed to get them or would ask
    questions if they didn't. IE: When with them in a store, I've
    told them not to get a department store credit card to pay for
    something, because the interest rate is generally too high. Pay
    cash or, if necessary, Amex with no interest. That sort of
    thing.

  •  
    4

    Stacey Bradford

    06/24/09 | Report as spam

    RE: A Website to Teach Your Kids About Money

    @Mrchancely -- I've too noticed that my daughter often listens more closely to "teachable moments" than formal lessons. Perhaps the key is to keep the official lessons short and to remember kids have very short attention spans.

  •  
    5

    lulunyc

    07/07/09 | Report as spam

    RE: A Website to Teach Your Kids About Money

    I've been teaching my 3 and 4 year old sons about money using Moonjar's moneybox. It is divided into three sections, Save, Spend and Share. Anytime the kids receive money we divide it up into the three sections. We have a specific percentage for each section.

    I also opened a passbook savings account for them. I like the passbook account because they can bring their book in when they deposit money. The bank also has a fun change counter. The boys bring in their money, count it in the change counter, deposit it with the teller and leave with their lollipop. Once we leave the bank we will show the boys their deposit in their passbook.

    We've been sharing locally by taking the Share money to buy egg sandwiches or other food and giving it directly to someone who looks like they need a warm breakfast. Our boys have been able to see first hand the impact sharing can have on someone.

    As for the spending portion, the boys will decide on something they want. They save for it and then buy it with their money.

    For every day lessons, we talk to the boys about how we need to work to earn money to pay for things. As they get older we will expand on our discussion about money and include them in our weekly budget conversations.

    I am motivated to keep this conversation going with my children b/c I do not want them to add to the statistics of college grads with overwhelming credit card debt.

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Stacey Bradford

Stacey L. Bradford covers personal finance with a focus on issues that affect families. Her first book, The Wall Street Journal. Financial Guidebook for New Parents, hits shelves June 2009. She was previously an associate editor at SmartMoney.com for more than 10 years.

Stacey Bradford

Jolie Solomon

Jolie Solomon is sitting in for Stacey Bradford, who is on maternity leave. She has been a reporter, writer, or editor at many publications, including The Wall Street Journal, Newsweek, Fortune Small Business, More and the the late lamented Cincinnati Post.

Jolie Solomon

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