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One TikTok at a time: How Kyla Scanlon is making finance fun

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One TikTok at a time: How Kyla Scanlon is making finance fun

She’s considered an influencer who uses TikTok, Instagram and YouTube to make financial education fun for young audiences.

Kyla Scanlon, 25, is a former options trader and the founder of Bread, a company that produces videos and skits that go viral.

“I’ll pretend to be [Federal Reserve Chair] Jerome Powell [or] pretend to be different stocks,” Scanlon told CNBC’s “ETF Edge” this week. “That really gets people involved because they’re like, ‘Oh, that’s funny. I can look at that and laugh’ … That really humanizes finance and brings people in in a way they wouldn’t normally expect.”

Her content focuses on helping young people understand how various economic topics affect them.

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“When we talk about the Federal Reserve, it’s oftentimes very abstract. Like, they’re raising interest rates, but what does that really mean?” Scanlon said. “People want to know how things impact them directly.”

One of her viral videos is on the prevalence of “doomerism.” She defines it as a pessimistic view of life and the economy focusing on everything that’s going wrong.

“It’s a really enticing philosophy for people to subscribe to because it sort of removes agency from your life,” said Scanlon, who wants to give her audience a greater understanding of the hot-button Wall Street issues including the jobs market, inflation and recent bank failures.

As of late this week, Scanlon has almost 166,000 followers on TikTok, more than 156,000 on Twitter and 28,000 YouTube subscribers.

CORRECTION: This story has been updated to correct Kyla Scanlon’s age.

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Taxes, savings, credit scores: How do NY schools stack up in personal finance education?

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Taxes, savings, credit scores: How do NY schools stack up in personal finance education?

When it comes to teaching kids personal finance, New York scores a B.

The grades come from The Center for Financial Literacy at Champlain College in Burlington, Vermont.

Twenty other states shared also got a B, which they earned because they require some amount of personal finance education — but fall short of a semester-long standalone course in personal finance, which would earn them an A.

“Not a day will go by after a student graduates from high school that they don’t think about money,” John Pelletier, director of the Center for Financial Literacy, said in an interview.

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New York requires only that students get about 15 hours of personal finance instruction as part of a 12th-grade course in economics, he said.

Pelletier stressed the importance of financial literacy during a time when “it gets more and more complex every day.” He noted all the new apps that keep popping up to help manage finances.

There is plenty of information to pack into a semester-long course, he said: understanding budgeting, taxes, credit scores, saving for retirement, interest, income expectations for different careers, and how to avoid habits like using payday loans.

Making personal finance a priority

Pelletier said there are three ways for states to fit in a required semester-long course:

  • Requiring personal finance in place of an elective.
  • Adding it as a requirement without taking any other course away.
  • Allowing it to count towards more than one requirement for graduation. For example: allow it to count as a math, social studies, fine arts or foreign language credit.

If not mandated, personal finance education tends to be required in richer, whiter schools, Pelletier said. Therefore, the best way to create equity is through statewide policies, he said.

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Seven states currently get an A for requiring a semester-long class. But that number is supposed to hit 24 by 2028 as more states get serious about teaching personal finance.

In New York, several bills would require a standalone course in personal finance, but it’s unclear if any have a shot of becoming law, Pelletier said.

He also noted a 2022 survey of 1,030 adults by the National Endowment for Financial Education, in which 88% of respondents wanted their states to require a semester- or year-long financial education course in high school. Even more telling: 80% wished they were required to take one when they were in school.

Contact Diana Dombrowski at ddombrowski@gannett.com. Follow her on Twitter at @domdomdiana.

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Grand Rapids finance park teaches students real-world money strategies

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Grand Rapids finance park teaches students real-world money strategies

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. — A Grand Rapids nonprofit commemorated the opening of a handful of new spaces meant to support students Monday.

There was a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the Karl & Susan Hascall JA Finance Park along with six others. It’s all thanks to a program operated by the Junior Achievement of the Michigan Great Lakes (JAMGL).

Their goal is to give students their best shot at life after graduating, incorporating real-life scenarios they should know.

“We have this partnership with JA that allows us to offer exposure for young leaders and how they think about their careers and provide that important financial literacy at the same time,” says SpartanNash CEO Tony Sarsam.

The program is open to students in eighth through 12th grade. Attendees will spend a full day at the finance park, where they will be instructed to establish a monthly budget paired with a randomly chosen career and hypothetical living scenario.

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“They’ll learn about what it takes to make a transportation decision, a housing decision or utilities decision, and how they all work together,” says Junior Achievement President & CEO William Coderre. “The whole idea is to build a balanced budget.”

JAMGL estimates more than 20,000 students will visit the center annually.

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Wakeman Boys & Girls Club’s financial literacy program aims to give Bridgeport teens life skills

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Wakeman Boys & Girls Club’s financial literacy program aims to give Bridgeport teens life skills

BRIDGEPORT — Even though she is just 18-years-old, Andrea Palacios already owns her own business. 

The Harding High School senior spends her spare time printing custom shirts, sweatshirts and other items that she sells online to fellow students and fans of her artwork. 

But the budding entrepreneur is still new to the ins and outs of running a business. That’s why she has signed up to join the Wakeman Boys & Girls Club’s new finance lab, a financial literacy program designed to give teenagers the skills to balance a checkbook, take out loans and save money. 

“I am starting to build my career and I don’t want a bad financial decision to affect my credit score,” Palacios said in an interview. “I want to learn how to keep my business expenses separate from my own expenses.” 

Wakeman is preparing to launch the afterschool program in January at its brand new, nearly 45,000-square-foot clubhouse on Madison Avenue with an inaugural class of about 15 to 20 high school-aged participants. 

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