Daily life presents many occasions to help
children understand money and how to use it
well. Children learn by playing, by imitation,
and by participation. Suit activities to your
child's age, interest level, and attention span.
For example:
* Give children younger than five mixed coins
to count as objects (one, two, three coins).
Supervise children handling coins--they're easily
swallowed. As children grow, help them identify
coins and count them as money (one nickel, one
dime, two pennies--that's 17 cents). 
* In a store, occasionally give your child
some chance to spend. Limit the options--that
saves time and reduces conflict. Also give your
child the option to save the coins at home rather
than spend them in the store.
* Your young child might not be ready to understand
the concept of saving money for college, but
might be ready to save to buy a book or a toy.
Young children need rewards to reinforce their
saving habit, so at this stage tie savings to
spending or short-term goals. Then, when your
child achieves one goal, encourage selection
of a new goal.
* When the piggy bank at home has a few dollars
in it, bring your child to [name of credit union]
to open a savings account and make a deposit.
The credit union welcomes children's accounts
and will reinforce your messages about smart
money handling. Set up routine visits to the
credit union to show how savings really add
up.
* Ask your child to help make buying decisions
from time to time. Say, "You decide which
cereal we'll buy this week," and offer
two or three acceptable choices. To help your
child evaluate the choice, later ask, "Are
you glad you picked that one? Would you choose
it again?"
* Express out loud some of your own goals,
options, and decisions as you shop. Say, "We
won't rent movies this week because we're saving
for vacation." Or, "This fruit looks
old--it's not worth spending the money on it."
* Set up three small boxes in your child's
bedroom. Label one for saving, one for spending,
and one for sharing. As children receive money,
set up a system so that a certain percentage
automatically goes into each box. Then, for
example, a child will have a set amount of his
or her own money to put in the collection basket
at church.
Robins Federal Credit Union is here to help
all members, even young ones, make the most
of their resources. Contact us today at (478)
923-3773 or (800) 241-2405 for more ideas to
help get your little ones started keeping track
of their finances.
Copyright 2007 Credit Union
National Association Inc. Information subject
to change without notice. All other rights
reserved.
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