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Create a Career Budget
Approximate Time Needed:
60 Minutes
Lesson Summary:
Students will learn how budgets work and why they are valuable, as well as learn how to create a budget based upon potential career earnings.
Lesson Objective:
Students will, through group discussions and web-based research, create a budget and see how to develop a concrete plan with money. Students will also communicate their ideas and findings to the group in a class presentation.
Materials and Resources:
- ECOS Career Search or Career Directory
- ECOS Career Strategy
- ECOS Life Skills
- Budget worksheet
- Classified section of local newspaper
- Calculator
- Paper and pen and/or pencil
Helpful Hints:
Students can work individually, but would preferably working groups of two or three
Be sure to emphasize that this is not a traditional math exercise with one right, absolute answer. Students are formulating estimated budgets for the practice of doing so, not to see if all their numbers add up correctly.
Activities
- Students login to ECOS using their User ID and Password and then go to the Life Skills module
- Once in the Life Skills module, students click on Resources and then on Finance to choose the “Budgets” article
- Students will read the article and answer the following questions on a separate piece of paper
- What is a budget?
- List three advantages of using budgets
- Have you ever used a budget before? If yes, when? How did it work for you?
- If you were to estimate your total monthly expenses as a working professional, what would you guess?
- Students will go to the Career Search or Career Directory and choose one career to save to their Locker
- Students will read the data provided in the Career’s details pages and go to the Career Strategy to view the salary information for their chosen career
- Students will use the strategy function to specify in which state they would like to view the salary information
- Students will refer to the classified section of the local newspaper to search for information pertaining to local prices (i.e., apartment rentals, furniture and car purchases, day care, etc.)
- Students will create a monthly/yearly budget based on the researched information and insert information into the Budget Worksheet
- Students will look at their results and discuss them with their group, answering the following questions in a group discussion
- Do your estimations seem accurate and realistic?
- Are you surprised by any of the numbers and/or results? For instance, are your total monthly expenses more than you expected?
- Each group of students should present their sample budget in front of the class, listing their estimates for each individual expense and sharing their answers to the research questions
- The teacher should be able to speak to the following issues
- Common themes found in the budgets presented by students
- Reality of student estimates (may compare student estimates with real-world examples)
- Importance of budgets (may provide other examples of budgets such as a company’s budget, giving concrete examples of how these budgets affect every-day life)
Evaluation:
The presentation or a combination of the presentation and the notes from the research
Possible Adaptations:
After the first budget exercise, other budget exercises may be introduced. For example, students can create a budget based on a specific scenario, such as living in a specific city and finding out the average amount spent renting a one-bedroom apartment.
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