They’ll still complain that it’s information they’ll never use in real life
Illustrious-Fruit35 on
My inlaws could use this course
[deleted] on
[removed]
Titsfortuesday on
They teach you financial literacy in careers class now? I don’t remember being taught any of that. It was definitely one of my biggest complaints about high school.
Edit: This was around 15 years ago, maybe I just had a shit teacher.
crimsontape on
GOOD. FINALLY.
If you can’t understand the basics of compound interest, you’re ripe to get taken for a ride.
rhunter99 on
For everyone else, I highly encourage to take McGill’s free online personal finance course
If they learn financial responsibility, won’t that eliminate them from ever getting a job in politics?
BitchMagnets on
Careers was bloody useless, the only thing I remember from that was some colour test. It should be its own course. Financial literacy will follow you from the day you start working to the day you die. It’s not something you can teach in a week.
Smackolol on
Back to high school for my wife it seems.
2EscapedCapybaras on
I bet that’s really going to work well for the 40% of high school students in Ontario that actually meet the attendance requirements. Not so much for the other numpties.
Albertan. Why do I feel like I learned about compounding interest in grade 7 for mortgages/loans and investing. When we we’re also told that the average person earns 1 million dollars in their lifetime. (Thanks past that at 40 still not happy about my finances)
We also had Career and Life Management (CALM) class in grade 10 that was mandatory, no one took seriously. Take care of this egg for a week or 2, now a electronic baby. With house hold budgeting based on a career picked from a hat.
How have other provinces not been teaching these things? Or is it that the students just didn’t care at the time.
CanNeverBeTooHigh on
itd funny if everyone becomes financially literate enough to realize that without an already existing large pile of money to start out with the deck is stacked in such a way that the odds are you will never own a home let alone be mortgage free.
Due-Bookkeeper-2001 on
Biggest W they could have done
I had to research into YouTube videos and The Wealthy Barber book to learn about finance and investing at the age of 29 at the beginning of January this year when I could have been doing this since I was a teenager, but my parents never learned about money because nobody taught them so ofc I didn’t learn anything until I realized I didn’t wanna work everyday and still be/feel broke.
Teenagers need to understand money, compound interest and time so I’m all for this, sad it took us this long enough.
No-Journalist-9036 on
I’m curious how Canada remains in top 20 of PISA tests if our literacy and numeracy skills are wanting…
FoxDieDM on
It should be… it’s an important life lesson on how you should manage your own personal finances. It’s a win for future generations, so they don’t fall into the same credit traps others do.
laugrig on
Financial literacy test should include understanding that’ll you’ll be a tax slave for corrupt/special interests groups siphoning taxpayer money for the rest of your life unless you leave this country.
EkruGold on
Seeing how they’re at an average of somewhat understanding 6th grade math, I think this is long overdue.
Sylvus_ on
This should be mandatory for anyone using the financial benefits of Canada as well. We need to increase financial literacy tenfold.
RomanPotato8 on
Finally! I work in lending for small businesses in rural ON and the amount of small business owners who have never done a budget is way too many.
8fmn on
Careers is a half credit course. The entire course is going to become just a prep for this test and the test itself.
Financial literacy is important. It should be taught in high school curriculum. I don’t think this is the best way to do it. If we hadn’t destreamed math it would have been easy to add it in there. Destreamed subject teachers are drowning in differentiating their course content for too wide of a range of student abilities. Speaking as a destreamed Science teacher.
Beneficial-Ride-4475 on
Well, that’s actually an intelligent move. I have to say I’m a little surprised.
Jizzaldo on
If that’s the case, liberals are gonna start having a difficult time getting elected in the future.
namotous on
I know a lot of people would benefit from this
KelVarnsen_2023 on
Here is the first question on the test:
If a round trip full fare business class flight from Toronto to Ottawa costs $1,566 when booked the day before; how many flights do you have to take before buying a $30 million private jet becomes the better financial option?
Captain-Joystick on
I took an extra year in high school (mine was the first year that abolished grade 13) and made a point of taking a math class so I wouldn’t have any missed math year on my college application – ended up taking ‚Mathematics of Personal Finance‘ so that it would be easier to get a good grade but it honestly was the single most useful course I think I ever took.
They thought you how to budget, how credit works, interest rates compounded over different amortization rates, it was immediately relevant to everybody in that class, nobody was zoning out while the teacher geeked out over quadratic equations, it frankly should be mandatory.
zivlynsbane on
Teach them that taking a course in college/university that’s completely saturated in the work force is not a good idea.
tissuecollider on
Step 1 – Take one drug dealing kid
Step 2 – wait till his rich dad dies
Step 3 – inherit
Step 4 – declare yourself financially savvy
It’s the Ford way!
ce34d7b8 on
The test in a few years: 🫴
stereofonix on
This is a good thing. They should also really explain the perils of getting sucked into unnecessary credit when they turn 18. I know far too many that got sucked into their first visas at 18 and destroyed their credit for most of their 20s
Strange-Salt720 on
FINALLY. THIS IS EXCELLENT!
rubber2ice on
I went to school with a guy who had a tshirt that said: „How can I be overdrawn, I still have cheques left“ 🙂
Objective-Alps-4785 on
a lot of kids are doomed to fail i see unless the testing has gotten easier since I was in HS.
112iias2345 on
One of the questions should be the cost analysis of these useless University degrees society has been pushing (and OSAP funding) the last 20+ years…
ethereal3xp on
Very good. No computers/AI cheat allowed.
UwUHowYou on
Going to love the part when its
„Rent should be no more than 30% of your income“
„Transportation..“
Etc.
dagthegnome on
When I was in high school in Ontario 20 years ago, the college-stream Grade 11 math course was all about personal finance. The year after I took it, they got rid of it and replaced it with a curriculum full of abstract math that no one who planned to attend college instead of university would ever need.
hoxwort on
This is good. This should have been taught for decades
HAV3L0ck on
Now do a critical thinking course requirement.
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38 Kommentare
They’ll still complain that it’s information they’ll never use in real life
My inlaws could use this course
[removed]
They teach you financial literacy in careers class now? I don’t remember being taught any of that. It was definitely one of my biggest complaints about high school.
Edit: This was around 15 years ago, maybe I just had a shit teacher.
GOOD. FINALLY.
If you can’t understand the basics of compound interest, you’re ripe to get taken for a ride.
For everyone else, I highly encourage to take McGill’s free online personal finance course
http://www.mcgillpersonalfinance.com
Sounds discriminatory.
If they learn financial responsibility, won’t that eliminate them from ever getting a job in politics?
Careers was bloody useless, the only thing I remember from that was some colour test. It should be its own course. Financial literacy will follow you from the day you start working to the day you die. It’s not something you can teach in a week.
Back to high school for my wife it seems.
I bet that’s really going to work well for the 40% of high school students in Ontario that actually meet the attendance requirements. Not so much for the other numpties.
[https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/ontario-high-school-attendance-9.7164970](https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/ontario-high-school-attendance-9.7164970)
Albertan. Why do I feel like I learned about compounding interest in grade 7 for mortgages/loans and investing. When we we’re also told that the average person earns 1 million dollars in their lifetime. (Thanks past that at 40 still not happy about my finances)
We also had Career and Life Management (CALM) class in grade 10 that was mandatory, no one took seriously. Take care of this egg for a week or 2, now a electronic baby. With house hold budgeting based on a career picked from a hat.
How have other provinces not been teaching these things? Or is it that the students just didn’t care at the time.
itd funny if everyone becomes financially literate enough to realize that without an already existing large pile of money to start out with the deck is stacked in such a way that the odds are you will never own a home let alone be mortgage free.
Biggest W they could have done
I had to research into YouTube videos and The Wealthy Barber book to learn about finance and investing at the age of 29 at the beginning of January this year when I could have been doing this since I was a teenager, but my parents never learned about money because nobody taught them so ofc I didn’t learn anything until I realized I didn’t wanna work everyday and still be/feel broke.
Teenagers need to understand money, compound interest and time so I’m all for this, sad it took us this long enough.
I’m curious how Canada remains in top 20 of PISA tests if our literacy and numeracy skills are wanting…
It should be… it’s an important life lesson on how you should manage your own personal finances. It’s a win for future generations, so they don’t fall into the same credit traps others do.
Financial literacy test should include understanding that’ll you’ll be a tax slave for corrupt/special interests groups siphoning taxpayer money for the rest of your life unless you leave this country.
Seeing how they’re at an average of somewhat understanding 6th grade math, I think this is long overdue.
This should be mandatory for anyone using the financial benefits of Canada as well. We need to increase financial literacy tenfold.
Finally! I work in lending for small businesses in rural ON and the amount of small business owners who have never done a budget is way too many.
Careers is a half credit course. The entire course is going to become just a prep for this test and the test itself.
Financial literacy is important. It should be taught in high school curriculum. I don’t think this is the best way to do it. If we hadn’t destreamed math it would have been easy to add it in there. Destreamed subject teachers are drowning in differentiating their course content for too wide of a range of student abilities. Speaking as a destreamed Science teacher.
Well, that’s actually an intelligent move. I have to say I’m a little surprised.
If that’s the case, liberals are gonna start having a difficult time getting elected in the future.
I know a lot of people would benefit from this
Here is the first question on the test:
If a round trip full fare business class flight from Toronto to Ottawa costs $1,566 when booked the day before; how many flights do you have to take before buying a $30 million private jet becomes the better financial option?
I took an extra year in high school (mine was the first year that abolished grade 13) and made a point of taking a math class so I wouldn’t have any missed math year on my college application – ended up taking ‚Mathematics of Personal Finance‘ so that it would be easier to get a good grade but it honestly was the single most useful course I think I ever took.
They thought you how to budget, how credit works, interest rates compounded over different amortization rates, it was immediately relevant to everybody in that class, nobody was zoning out while the teacher geeked out over quadratic equations, it frankly should be mandatory.
Teach them that taking a course in college/university that’s completely saturated in the work force is not a good idea.
Step 1 – Take one drug dealing kid
Step 2 – wait till his rich dad dies
Step 3 – inherit
Step 4 – declare yourself financially savvy
It’s the Ford way!
The test in a few years: 🫴
This is a good thing. They should also really explain the perils of getting sucked into unnecessary credit when they turn 18. I know far too many that got sucked into their first visas at 18 and destroyed their credit for most of their 20s
FINALLY. THIS IS EXCELLENT!
I went to school with a guy who had a tshirt that said: „How can I be overdrawn, I still have cheques left“ 🙂
a lot of kids are doomed to fail i see unless the testing has gotten easier since I was in HS.
One of the questions should be the cost analysis of these useless University degrees society has been pushing (and OSAP funding) the last 20+ years…
Very good. No computers/AI cheat allowed.
Going to love the part when its
„Rent should be no more than 30% of your income“
„Transportation..“
Etc.
When I was in high school in Ontario 20 years ago, the college-stream Grade 11 math course was all about personal finance. The year after I took it, they got rid of it and replaced it with a curriculum full of abstract math that no one who planned to attend college instead of university would ever need.
This is good. This should have been taught for decades
Now do a critical thinking course requirement.