I am part of a mentor group for some high school and college kids now. I want to avail a recommended resource to them to get their feet wet with personal finance and financial literacy.
Any suggestions are welcome. Or also, what would be the topics a thorough curriculum on this would cover?
- Your Money Or Your Life
Great book on financial independence and simple investing. Get the 2017 version since they made modifications to their investing recs to be less bond centric.
- I Will Teach You To Be Rich
The name is gaudy IMO, but the contents are very rational and cover pretty much all the foundations of personal finance, from investing to budgeting, to enjoying your life. The name feels like a get rich quick thing, but it's about what the other describes as "living your rich life" - essentially enjoying your money in addition to saving and investing for the future.
- The Simple Path To Wealth
Great simple investing book. Probably the best investing book for the average person, in my opinion. Well written, to the point, and rational.
There are some other great books out there, but those are three solid ones to start with. I Will Teach You To Be Rich is the most catch all based on what you're looking for.
1. Insurances: health, dental, car, life, renter, home owner, etc.. 2. Your basic rights such as getting pay for the hours your work (wage theft is a huge issue). 3. Your credit, how to protect and build it. 4. Scams, how to identify scams and protect yourself. 5. Understand how financing work. 6. Understand how progressive income tax work.
The list is endless. It's crazy we ask people to invest in 401k without knowing what it is.
https://www.open.edu/openlearn/money-business/mses-academy-m...
Worth a look as some topics are universal
Frankly, I doubt you will find anything better in finance that what came from those 2 guys. It's pure, old school, wisdom. Backed by >50 years of outstanding financial results.
If you can afford it, buy them 'Poor Charlie's Almanack' by Charlie Munger - and let them go down the rabbit hole.
'Millionaire Teacher' is also fantastic, and I believe is U.S. based (been a few years).
Both books teach the fundamentals of how to save/invest in a safe manner in a way that is easily digestible. Barber especially is an engrossing read.