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JA Dollars and $ense teaches students about earning,
spending, sharing, and saving money, and businesses they
can start or jobs they can perform to earn money. Six
required, after-school, volunteer-led activities.
The
key learning objectives listed beside each activity
state the skills and knowledge students will gain.
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Session One:
Money in the Bank
Students learn to
manage a bank account. They play the Community
Game to reinforce their money-management skills
and to better understand the role and importance
of money in their lives. |
Key Learning
Objectives
Students will be
able to:
-
identify the
role of money in everyday life.
-
explain the
benefits of a personal banking account.
-
practice
making sound financial choices.
-
manage a
personal bank account by making deposits and
withdrawals.
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Session Two: A
Sense of Worth
Students
identify businesses they can start
or jobs they can perform to earn money.
Activities focus on developing a positive work
ethic. Students continue playing the Community
Game to further understand the role of money in
their lives. |
Key Learning
Objectives
Students will be
able to:
- identify
several characteristics of a positive work
ethic.
-
distinguish between working for someone and
self-employment.
- identify
ways to earn income through jobs or a small
business.
- practice
personal money-management skills through
business and ethical decision-making.
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Session Three:
Balancing Act
Students
identify personal skills and interests and
connect them with possible business
opportunities. Working in groups, students learn
about market research and play the final round
of the Community Game. |
Key Learning
Objectives
Students will be
able to:
- match
personal skills with jobs and
self-employment.
- understand
market research.
- identify
three to five ways to share, save, and spend
personal income.
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Session Four:
Building a Business
Students
explore their jobs skills and the types of
businesses in which they are interested. They
identify the basic steps for starting and
operating a small business. Using this
information, students develop a business plan. |
Key Learning
Objectives
Students will be
able to:
- define the
basic steps in planning and starting a
business.
- calculate
operating expenses and income for a small
business.
- develop a
basic business plan based on their job
skills and interests.
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Session Five:
Get SMART
Students
continue to practice saving and spending as
business teams. The concept of making SMART
consumer decisions is introduced through
role-playing. Students work as teams to play
Round One of the Business Game. |
Key Learning
Objectives
Students will be
able to:
- practice
using the SMART system to make consumer
decisions.
- identify
the difference between personal and business
spending.
- manage
money by making SMART business and consumer
decisions.
- apply the
problem-solving steps needed to own and
operate a small business.
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Session Six:
What’s the Catch?
During the
final session, students learn to recognize
deceptive advertising and the importance of
ethical business practices. Continuing to work
as business teams, students conclude the program
by playing Round Two of the Business Game. |
Key Learning
Objectives
Students will be
able to:
- recognize
deceptive advertising.
- apply
money-management skills in a simulated
business.
- record and
track financial gains and losses in a
simulated business.
- promote
business through advertising.
- practice
making sound financial choices and using
cooperative decision-making skills.
- apply the
steps necessary to own and operate a small
business.
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JA
Dollars and $ense enhances students’ learning of the
following concepts and skills:
Concepts–Advertising,
Banking, Business, Business plan, Consumer, Deceptive,
Deposit, Earn, Employee, Entrepreneur, Estimate,
Expense, Good, Income, Interest, Job skill, Market
research, Mentor, Money, Money management, Profit, Role
model, Save, Self-employed, Service, Share, Spend,
Start-up cost, Withdrawal, Work ethic
Skills–Active
listening, Analysis, Applying information, Basic Math,
Brainstorming, Chart data, Compare and contrast,
Completing forms, Computation, Critical thinking,
Deductive reasoning, Decision-making, Drawing,
Evaluating data, Following written and verbal
instructions, Group work, Matching and classifying,
Mind-mapping, Problem-solving, Recording deposits and
withdrawals, Role-playing, Self-assessment, Taking
turns, Teamwork, Vocabulary building
JA
Dollars and $ense encompasses economics and business
curriculum for students in grades three through five.
The program emphasizes social studies content while
providing a strong focus on mathematics, reading, and
writing skills. The JA Dollars and $ense
experience enhances students’ classroom curriculum.
Students are encouraged to use innovative thinking to
learn money-management skills that support positive
attitudes as they explore and enhance their career
aspirations.
Through a variety of hands-on activities and
technological supplements designed to support
differentiated learning styles, students develop a
better understanding of the relationship between what
they learn at school and their successful participation
in a worldwide economy.
JA
Dollars and $ense is a series of six sessions. The
program is packaged in a portfolio containing detailed
session plans, informative Take-Home Flyers for students
and families, and additional learning materials to
ensure a successful experience for students, volunteers,
after-school staff, and teachers.
All
JA programs are designed to support the skills and
competencies identified by the Partnership for 21st
Century Skills. These programs also augment
school-based, work-based, and connecting activities for
communities with school-to-work initiatives. |