The Financial Literacy course introduces students to the fundamentals of personal finance — from understanding the evolution of money to managing savings, budgeting, and smart digital transactions. This beginner-friendly course simplifies key financial topics like assets, liabilities, interest, inflation, taxes, and cybersecurity. Each session blends practical knowledge with engaging activities, helping students develop lifelong financial responsibility. By the end of this course, learners will be able to make informed money decisions, understand how banks and digital payments work, and manage their personal finances effectively.
What you'll get with this course
A practical introduction to personal finance that empowers students to understand money, manage it wisely, and build strong financial habits from a young age.
Interactive Learning Modules
Engaging, story-based sessions that make finance fun and easy to understand.
Hands-On Money Management Activities
Practical exercises like budgeting games, investment simulations, and expense tracking.
Expert-Led Classes
Sessions guided by trained financial educators who simplify complex ideas into relatable concepts.
Deliverig skills that matter
The course is structured to help students create meaningful, real projects — not just learn theory. By the end of the course students will.
Understand the value and functions of money.
Build awareness of modern banking and digital finance.
Develop habits for responsible financial behavior.
Tools technologies we use
Simple, engaging, and student-friendly tools to make financial learning practical and relatable.
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You’ll Learn Tools
- Financial Learning Tools
- Banking & Digital Tools
- Safety & Awareness Tools
- Digital transaction flowcharts
Frequently asked question
Students in Grades 6–8 who want to learn money management and financial responsibility.
No. The course starts from basics like money evolution and budgeting before moving to banking and investments.
It’s highly practical, uses relatable examples, and includes games, simulations, and case studies.
20 hours, divided into structured, activity-based sessions.
Yes. Students learn how to manage pocket money, set goals, understand needs vs wants, and make informed purchases.