Students urge earlier financial‑literacy exposure, propose middle‑school units
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Delegates proposed introducing short financial‑literacy units in middle school, integrating them into existing classes and aligning teacher credentialing and state curriculum updates to sustain implementation; lawmakers warned about timing and training needs given AB 2927 implementation for high‑school coursework.
Presenters told the committee that financial mistakes by peers — from gambling losses to misunderstood student loans — underscore the need for earlier financial education.
Ethan Hong and classmates pointed to AB 2927, which adds a high‑school personal‑finance graduation requirement, and asked the Legislature to backfill middle school with a short unit so students enter high school with foundational skills. "A short unit long introductory course in middle school would provide a basic understanding of personal finance before high school," Ethan said, adding that teacher training through the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing and Instructional Quality Commission updates would sustain implementation.
Legislators praised the idea but urged caution since AB 2927’s high‑school course will roll out and require teacher preparation; committee members recommended pilot programs and backward‑mapping the high‑school curriculum before a mandated middle‑school rollout. No formal action was taken.
