MUSTANG Mustang High School teacher Carrie Hixon recently asked her students What if you used your bank debit card to buy lunch at Taco Bell and you didn't have enough money in your checking account. What do you think Taco Bell will do? Make you wash dishes, the class clown popped off.
A serious Hixon countered, Until recently, Taco Bell and your bank each could charge you a fee of $25 to $35. Thankfully, a recent law requires establishments to deny the purchase and hand your card back to you, if you have insufficient funds.
If you have overdraft protection for your checking account, your bank instead might extend you a short-term loan or pull the purchase amount from a linked savings account, but it comes with a cost, she said.
Did you really want to pay that much for your meal at Taco Bell? she said.
The what-if scenario is meant to cause students to think about their personal finances. Per state legislation passed in 2007, Oklahoma students, effective this May, now must demonstrate an understanding in banking, taxes, investing, loans, insurance, identity theft and eight other areas to graduate. Teachers are required to certify students working knowledge in each area.
Schools like Mustang, which offered a personal finances course before the mandate or Kingston, which implemented the requirement soon after enactment, are on track. But countless others are scrambling to meet the additional curriculum requirement parking many students in front of computers for quickie, do-it-yourself learning.
Said Amy Lee, executive director of the Oklahoma Council on Economic Education, which lobbied for and helped develop the curriculum, Oklahoma has some of the strongest standards in the country. Where other states require four or five standards regarding earnings, savings and investing, Oklahoma has 14 standards including three that are state-specific: bankruptcy, the financial impact of gambling and charitable giving, she said.
The problem is the openness in the law, Lee said. It includes no funding for school districts to hire dedicated financial literacy teachers, she said.
Moreover, districts are permitted to implement the requirements in the seventh through 12th grades and use curriculum provided by the state Education Department or whatever they choose, she said.
Consequently, many school districts statewide are squeezing the curriculum into government, history or other classes, Lee said. Some rural schools in northwestern Oklahoma are just now getting started with the help of the Cherokee Nation Foundation, she said.
Joe Griese, a certified physical education teacher in charge of study hall and in-school suspension at Ada Junior High, oversees computer-based semesterlong classes for freshmen at Ada Junior High, along with two history teachers.
We're basically teaching them how to live on their own, Griese said.
At Kingston High School, Vicki Droddy teaches freshmen a year-long class in life skills. Projects include drawing straws for students and their would-be spouses future incomes and paying Droddy the bank for locally advertised cars and homes. Were very lucky that we have a principal who thought the class was important, and implemented it early, she said.
Various classes
Meanwhile, Southeast High School is meeting the requirement in varied ways, said Ann Kennedy, senior sponsor and advanced placement government teacher.
The curriculum is embedded in senior government classes, but many students meet the requirements through family consumer science, or home economics, or concurrent financial literacy courses with Oklahoma City Community College, she said. Advanced-placement students use independently paced computer courses and email Kennedy for help when they need it, she said.
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