Late Bloomer Wealth

Month: August 2018

RE-Introducing myself to what I do, and WHY?

Sorry if I am projecting an unabashed self-centered blog post, but it is important to review who I am and what I stand for in writing this personal finance blog from consumer POV (that is, I am not nor will I ever be a professional financial adviser). You deserve to know! Being a non-professional in the financial industry provides a unique point of view that is not accessible from profit-motive financial blogs or financial advisers (and there are thousands of blogs and books and many of them are good). As you can see, I have no ads on my blog and I give away my two books.* My books have received great reader reviews on Amazon. Check them out, but don’t buy them as you can get them free here on my blog. Just click on the books on the right.

Next Generation Personal Finance

Who would not like tons and MORE TONS of FREE teaching resources all in one website? All these amazing materials are from Tim Rezentta, the founder of Next Generation Person Finance. Tim provides EVERYTHING free which you need to teach financial literacy to your students. Yes, everything is free because he knows how important it is for people to know personal finance. He provides FREE training and a gazillion bits and pieces of valuable resources that you can use with your students immediately.
I discovered Tim and his Next Generation Personal Finance website just a few months ago. This website has so much information, ready to use resources, videos, teacher training opportunities and interviews with classroom teachers and financial literacy experts that you will not have to look anywhere else. Survey after survey says the same thing repeatedly that teaching financial literacy is as important to young people as teaching the basics. Finances can be incorporated into math and science that all teachers must cover. Tim has the material already for you from individual lessons to a complete semester plan. He has hundreds of videos. For example, an animated presentation of the difference between simple and compound interest. Colleagues! you do not have to search the web for money related or economic resources again! Its all on Tim’s website.

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