管家婆免费开奖大全

A trip to Disney World could be an opportunity to show kids how saving for something can pay off (photo by sugargliding via Flickr)

Is that Lego something you need or just something you want?

Economics, budgeting for six-year-olds to nine-year-olds

Children in grades one through three are in their most formative years, says the 管家婆免费开奖大全's Radha Maharaj 鈥 so she created a series of Kidonomics books to teach basic economic principles she hopes will serve them well throughout their lives.

An economist and lecturer in the Institute of Communication, Culture, Information and Technology at the 管家婆免费开奖大全 Mississauga, Mharaj knows just how important these principles are. In her consulting work, she meets clients facing bankruptcy who have no grasp of economics.

鈥淭hey aren鈥檛 grounded in the basic concepts,鈥 she said, shaking her head. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all about education and this was something that wasn鈥檛 taught at home and in the schools in the past.鈥

Although many Ontario schools are now introducing economic concepts in grade four, Maharaj believes it鈥檚 important to connect with children in earlier years when they are absorbing information like little sponges. Now, as a mother of two young daughters, she is even more convinced of the value of building an understanding of such principles early in life.

鈥淭hese are transferable life skills and they are applicable to daily living,鈥 she said.

The idea had been percolating in her mind for a number of years, but Maharaj (pictured right with illustrator Aaron Estrada) finally sat down and wrote three books, each a story with a lesson embedded in the tale.

Through The Shopping Adventure, children learn to differentiate between wants and needs. Summer Fun teaches them the importance of saving, and The Most Wonderful Time of the Year explores the concept of a budget. The series has a theme song, Choices, Choices, and a mobile app for iPhone and Android devices is in the final stages of development.

The app has come into being thanks to a team of third-year UTM students who took it on as their final project for a course taught by Professor Rhonda McEwen. A team of five students created the app using Touch Develop, a Microsoft tool that allows applications to be created on a mobile device.

鈥淚 love working on things intended for kids,鈥 said Khairia Taghdi, a third-year student studying interactive digital media. 鈥淲hen Dr. M came in and presented her app idea, I gravitated toward it.鈥

Like the book, the app takes children on a shopping trip to distinguish between needs and wants. Taghdi said it took the team about a month after meeting with Maharaj to develop the app.

鈥淲e took her ideas and insights and worked with them,鈥 Taghdi said. 鈥淚t was a fairly easy process because we had support from Dr. M.鈥

Maharaj said it was wonderful working with the students.

鈥淜ids here are so creative and insightful, and they could also understand children because they aren鈥檛 that far removed.鈥

She is beginning to promote the book, starting with an appearance on In the Loop, a local Rogers TV program, as well as.

鈥淭he series meets some of the math, language and social studies learning objectives in the curriculum,鈥 she said. 鈥淭eaching at every level is important."

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