
Each Money Camp at Home Program comes with:
1) Kid's Financial Freedom Playbook (workbook)
2) Easy to use Parent/Teacher Guide

Research shows just 10 hours makes
a difference!
The Money Camp at Home Curriculum provides a comprehensive
guide that helps you teach your kids the importance of saving
and investing and more importantly, why it’s critical
to start early. Keep your child from being one of the thousands
who’ve told us they wish they’d learned how money
works when they were young.
Available printed or as convenient downloadable PDF files!
ORDER TODAY!
If you don't prepare your kids to be
financial successful, who will?
You can also download
our order form
and fax in your order. |
Home School/Parent Curriculum
Learning how money works shouldn’t be an
elective! In fact, it just may be one of your child’s
most valuable lessons.
At The Money Camp, we teach kids how to create financial
freedom and we firmly believe that learning how to create
financial freedom helps empower kids to make choices that
ultimately lead to a more fulfilling life. Money Camp at
Home™ was designed for you with that purpose in mind.
Here's some scary statistics:
- America has the lowest savings rate of any industrialized
nation: .6% in 2004, down from 7.5% in the early 80’s
to 2.4% in 2002 and 24% during World War II.
- The population with the largest increase in bankruptcy
rates in 2004 was young adults under the age of 24.
- Pre-teens (ages 8-12) spend $19.1 billion dollars a
year, 87% of that supplied by parents.
- Teens (ages 13-19) spend $94.7 billion dollars a year,
37% of that supplied by parents.
- Young Adults (ages 20-21) spend $61.3 billion dollars
a year, 7% of that supplied by parents.
- Teens surveyed by Teenage Research Unlimited reported
spending 97% of their money instead of saving it!
- Undergraduate students carry an average of 3 credit
cards and one in three teenagers have at least one.
- By 2004, people from 16-22 comprised the majority of
shoppers despite the fact that they are ill-prepared to
manage their money.
- More than half (52%) of teens are at risk for substance
abuse if they have any one of these three risk factors:
stress, frequent boredom or TOO MUCH SPENDING MONEY!
- More college students drop out of college because of
financial reasons than academic reasons.
- Kids entering college are offered an average of 8 credit
cards the first week of school.
- Visa USA, on Aug. 9, 2005, released the results of its
annual back-to-school survey which found that a top concern
of parents is the development of their children’s
personal money management skills.
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