Elementary Financial Literacy Curriculum (Grades K-2) – 4-Week Program

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  • Elementary Financial Literacy Curriculum (Grades K-2) – 4-Week Program

$27.00

Reviews (7)

Teach kids money skills with this 4-week K-2 financial literacy curriculum! Includes fun, hands-on lessons on saving, budgeting, and earning money.

Overview

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4 Weeks of Fun, Hands-On Money Lessons for Young Learners!

Help kids build smart money habits early with this engaging 4-week financial literacy curriculum made just for Kindergarten through 2nd grade! Each week includes fun, age-appropriate lessons, interactive games, pretend play, and printable worksheets designed to introduce essential money skills in a way young children can understand and enjoy.

In This Curriculum, Kids Will Learn:

  • What money is and how it’s used

  • How to identify coins and dollar bills

  • The difference between needs and wants

  • Ways to earn money and simple entrepreneurship

  • How to save, spend, and budget wisely

  • Why savings and emergency funds matter

What’s Included:
✅ 4 Weekly Lesson Plans
✅ Fun Activities: Money Bingo, Lemonade Stand Role Play, Job Cards & More
✅ Printables: Worksheets, Games, Craft Templates, Savings Trackers
✅ Bonus Storytime Activities and Worksheets
✅ Easy to use for homeschool or classroom settings

This curriculum combines learning and play to help kids build confidence, critical thinking, and real-world money skills. Whether you’re a parent, teacher, or homeschooler—this is the perfect financial literacy starter kit for ages 5–8.

Reviews

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    Amada

    Wow So fun and engaging for my two kids to learn about money! I also love that they have a blog with shapable links on amazon to add more fun and creativity to help make the kids interested and learning through play!

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    Amanda

    I introduced this 4-week financial literacy unit to my kindergarten class as part of our “Life Skills Fridays.” Week 1 we did the coin & dollar ID, week 2 we sorted ’needs vs wants’, week 3 we set up a mock “Lemonade Stand” role-play, and week 4 we gave them savings trackers. The students were so proud showing off their trackers at home. I could see their confidence in counting money improve week by week — and it was fun enough that even shy students wanted to participate

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    Carlos

    We set up a little store in our dining room. The kids use real coins to buy snacks, then record their spending. This makes the lessons from week 2 & 4 so much more meaningful. My 7-year-old teaches the 5-year-old how to make change. They’re learning math and cooperation.

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    Naomi

    I blog about early learning, and I’ve found that real-coin work is crucial. So I printed the lessons, pulled together spare change, and let my daughter count out real money as we moved through counting, saving and spending concepts. Her interest in dollars and cents blossomed, she now saves coins in a piggy bank and tracks her savings with the worksheets.

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    Tina

    Great!

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    Mandy

    Great way to help little one understand the value of money

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    Crista

    Practical and engaging. So many ways and activities you can incorporate to make more fun! we love shopping days and i set up a store in the play room for them. Also i found through Pinterest and read the story! love that i can support them and hope they come out with more products for homeschooling and military families!

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