Youths lack financial savvy,
Mandell says "Our Vulnerable Youth: The Financial Literacy of American 12th Graders" (Jump$tart Coalition for Personal Financial Literacy, 1998), provides an eye-opening look at the current state of personal-finance literacy among American teen-agers. It contains facts and details from Mandell's 1997 benchmark survey of more than 1,500 12th graders, as well as the actual questionnaire used to determine students' financial literacy. Overall, students answered correctly just 57.3 percent of the 31 questions in the survey. And only 10.2 percent scored a "C" or better. "The results show that a startling percentage of students leave high school without a basic understanding of personal finance," Mandell says. "In a society where one's well-being is strongly tied to the success of one's financial decisions, that's a bit like sending lambs out to the slaughter." "For instance," Mandell continues, "many students go off to college not realizing that they can do permanent damage to their credit rating by not paying their phone bills. Then when they want to buy a house years later, those unpaid bills come back to haunt them, making it difficult to get a mortgage." What can be done? Mandell says it is not enough to simply provide students with hands-on experience in credit-card use, purchasing stock or balancing a checkbook. According to the book, students who don't use credit cards had higher test scores (57.9) than students who have their own cards (53.3) or use their parents' cards (57.7). Also, those who own securities (either stocks or mutual funds) had lower test scores (56.6) than those that don't own them (57). "This surprising finding indicates that experience alone is not a good teacher," Mandell says. "Unless it's accompanied by conceptual or theoretical understanding, experience adds little to a young adult's ability to maneuver within today's complex world of financial services. We need to provide them with a fundamental understanding of personal finance and impress upon them that poor financial decision-making can have devastating consequences." Mandell advocates creation of new personal-finance courses and improvement of existing courses in primary and secondary schools nationwide. He has worked with Jump$tart to develop educator guidelines (contained in the book) for implementation of personal-finance curricula designed for the nation's 50 million students in grades K-12. Mandell also has helped author a bill now before a congressional committee that will make personal finance a fundamental life skill to be taught throughout the nation's school systems. -By JOHN DELLA CONTRADA, Reporter Contributor
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