Financial Nutrition for Young Women: How (and Why) to Teach Girls about Money
By (Author) Melissa Donohue
Foreword by Molly Donohue
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
21st September 2017
United States
General
Non Fiction
332.0240082
Winner of 2018 IPPY Award Bronze Medal in Finance/Investment/Economics category 2018
Hardback
192
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
510g
A powerful resource for all women who want a better understanding of financial empowerment, this book provides an easy-to-follow approach for adults to teach girls about moneyand for girls to do some learning on their own. Women earn 78 cents on the dollar, on average, compared to men in America, despite decades of fighting for wage equality. And while it is true that women have significantly more opportunities for earning than in past eras, this improved ability for women to determine their own financial future makes it more important that girls understand the strategies for financial success. Financial Nutrition for Young Women: How (and Why) to Teach Girls about Money addresses the two critical levels that are necessary to truly eradicate women's economic inequality: what to teach girls and what women need to learn. Authored by a financial educator who is also a mother and a teacher, this book is for people who care about teenage girlsparents and other family members, educators, financial advisors, troop leaders, camp directors, and community organization leaders. The talking points and independent activities are easily accessible and engaging for both adults and students. Financial Nutrition for Young Women: How (and Why) to Teach Girls about Money can be used effectively in the home, the classroom, afterschool programs, clubs, and camps, as well as in girls' organizations. It can also be a resource to women who want to better understand how to empower themselves financially.
Melissa Donohue, EdD, is president and founder of Financial Nutrition, a nonprofit organization focused on girls' financial literacy and economic empowerment, and has more than 20 years of experience in finance, financial journalism, and financial education.