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Paying For Grades, Paying for Teeth, Setting Limits: Family Finance Picks #55

First, it’s paying for grades. Then it’s paying for teeth. Finally, we set some limits! Here are my favorite family finance picks from last week:

As School Starts, Parents Pay Up For Grades

Pay For Grades vs Pay For StudyI chatted with Chris Taylor last week about the classic parenting debate: should you pay kids for grades? It works for some families — see Ganesh’s story in the article. We tried it for a little while with two of our sons and saw no significant impact, so we dropped it. A study out of Harvard I wrote about last year found that paying for good study behaviors along the way is more effective and lasting than paying for the final outcome. That was the basis for my suggestion near the bottom of Chris’ article:

The bad thing about paying for outcome is that if the semester is going down the tubes, then there’s no motivation anymore. But if you’re paying for a habit like reading regularly or doing homework, then it’s never too late.

Read the full article here.

Visa’s Tooth Fairy App Calculates the Going Rate for Baby Teeth

Tooth Fairy IntelligenceAt first blush, you might think that parents with higher levels of income and education would pay their kids heftier tooth fairy rewards. You’d be very wrong according to VISA survey data just published via an online application and a mobile app.

Alex Madrigal from the The Atlantic writes: “I played a bit with the app, holding age, gender, and location steady while playing with the household income and education level variables. The smaller the amount I put in for household income, the greater the size of the average tooth fairy’s gift. In fact, I was only able to get calculator to output $5 by setting my household income to $20k per year and selecting that my highest level of educational attainment was high school. Grad school degree holders making more than $150,000 per year gave their kids an average of $1 per tooth.”

See the article here.

New Rules For Your Kid’s Allowance

It's OK to Set Limits!Beth Kobliner makes some excellent points in this allowance article like: you’ll want to base the allowance amount on what your child is expected to purchase (budget-based allowance vs. age-based), and it’s fine to set limits with “their” money. See Beth’s article here.

We’re constantly scouring the Internet looking for articles related to family finances and teaching kids good personal finance habits. You can visit our ever growing list of family finance bookmarks here. We’re up to 2,832 now!

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The New York Times Tackles Online Allowance

New York Times: Managing a Child's Allowance, the Online VersionRon Lieber weighs the pros and cons of online allowance management in today’s New York Times piece: Managing a Child’s Allowance, the Online Version. The article focuses on a competitor, but FamZoo receives some nice mentions at both the beginning (with a link to our About page) and the end (with a link to a post about our Partner Edition for credit unions, banks, and other financial organizations).

Here are a few thoughts on the points Ron raises in the article.

First, Ron worries that online sites like ours make money less tangible for kids. I understand that sentiment, but one of our key goals is to educate kids that electronic forms of money are in fact very real — just like physical forms. The sooner kids get that — and they catch on fast — the better. Ideally, they’ll achieve this epiphany before they get a hold of credit cards or purchase boatloads of virtual goods within some nefarious online game.

Second, Ron laments encouraging yet more screen time for kids. I hear that, but realistically any screen time spent on FamZoo periodically checking a balance or progress on a savings goal is negligible compared to the time they’re likely spending on Facebook, Battlefield 3, Halo, World of Warcraft, Minecraft, you name it.

Third, Ron worries that the email based purchase approval process in Tykoon might replace real conversations. That’s one reason we didn’t implement such an approval process in FamZoo. Spurring meaningful conversations between parent and child about life skills is a key objective. The other — and frankly bigger — reason we didn’t implement an email workflow process for transactions is that it’s just plain cumbersome. We constantly remind ourselves while designing FamZoo that parents are insanely busy. We want to make it super simple and painless for parents to be consistent, effective money mentors.

Fourth, Ron notes that it can be annoying when the child’s desired purchase or charitable giving target is not in the canned Tykoon store. This gets into a bigger issue of business models and conflicting priorities: if a site’s mission is to help kids learn good spending habits, but the site makes money by getting a cut of every purchase made from the site, a conflict naturally arises between the mission (delayed gratification) and the revenue (which is proportional to purchase volume). That’s why our business model is a flat, transparent subscription fee. When your child learns and exercises spending restraint, FamZoo’s revenue doesn’t tank.

Lastly, the article includes some discussion about why a more game-like approach isn’t taken. While I’m a fan of infusing game-like incentives into task based systems, I think anyone who thinks they’re going to make a youth financial education game that rivals today’s popular games (like World of Warcraft or even Angry Birds) is going to find that’s a very, very tall order — if not impossible. I think gamification can be applied to personal finance in clever ways, but personal finance just doesn’t really cut it as a game in and of itself. Why? Check out this video

Shh... FamZoo's Secret Finovate Teaser Trailer from Bill Dwight @FamZoo on Vimeo.

Your thoughts? Ron invites families to weigh in on the topic in his related blog post here.

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Financial Literacy Merit Badges, Rarely Too Early Never Too Late, Allowance Survey: Family Finance Picks #54

What was hot in the family finance arena this week? Financial literacy merit badges for girl scouts, a reminder that it’s rarely too early and it’s never too late to start teaching your kids good money habits, lots of headline grabbing stats from the recent AICPA allowance survey, and a bonus video from Alisa.

Here are the top family finance picks for the week:

How Eating Girl Scout Cookies Helps Kids Learn About Money

Thin Mints: Now Featuring 100% of the RDA for Financial EducationDan is pounding thin mint cookies with zero guilt these days. Why? Because he’s supporting financial education for girls. Selling girl scout cookies has been transformed from simple fund raising to part of an overall financial literacy program involving 11 badges: money manager, philanthropist, savvy shopper, business owner, budgeting, comparison shopping, financing my dreams, buying power, on my own, and good credit. Read more about how gorging yourself on thin mints can help girl scouts achieve the “business owner” merit badge here.

A Pre-College Spending Frenzy

by “Preserved Sanity” on Get Rich Slowly

Teaching Your Kids Good Money Habits: It's Rarely Too Early, And It's Never Too Late!If I only had a dollar for every time I’ve heard “I wish I had started earlier on teaching my kids how to manage their money!” Read how a guest blogger on Get Rich Slowly waited till age 18 with one son, but is starting at 9 with the other. The upshot for me: when it comes to teaching your kids good money habits, it’s rarely too early and it’s never too late! Read more here.

Monkey See, Monkey Do? Just 1% of Kids Save Any Allowance Money

Monkey See, Monkey Spend?“Just 1% of parents say their kids save any portion of their allowance.” Really?! This and more fun stats are covered in this Time article as a recent allowance survey gets more media play.

The American Institute of CPAs (AICPA) sponsored a Harris Poll of U.S. parents last month. The questions focused on allowance behaviors, and the survey is getting quite a bit of play in the media right now. Here are just a few of the headline grabbing stats bouncing around the web:

  • 61% of parents give their kids an allowance.
  • 54% of parents who do give allowances start before age 8.
  • Average weekly allowance amounts by age range are: 4-12 years - $5.90, 13-17 years - $14.59, 18-25(!) years - $34.88.
  • 89% of parents make their child do at least 1 hour of work a week in exchange for allowance.
  • 48% of parents pay at least $1 to their children who get an "A" in school.
  • The average cash reward for an "A" grade is $16.60.
  • Parents who are college graduates are far less likely to pay for grades than those who aren't (17% vs 46%)
  • At least 97% of the kids spend 100% of their allowance - 1% save a portion, 2% unknown.

Hmmm — that last one is pretty darn disturbing. By comparison, 69% of allowances set up by FamZoo parents include an automatic allocation into a virtual savings account.

On the brighter side, 23% of the surveyed parents cited charitable donations as part of their children's spending habits. How does that compare to FamZoo habits? 60% of the allowances in FamZoo automatically distribute funds to a virtual charitable giving account. Bravo!

Those comparisons seem to support our premise that an automated system can help drive better saving and giving habits.

Bonus pick: Alisa Weinstein of Earn My Keep says:

One of the most important rules when teaching kids about money is: be consistent.

One of the biggest challenges when teaching kids about money is: to be consistent.

Alisa offers three tips for staying consistent when teaching kids about money. Check out tip #3. Oh, and by the way, there’s an app for that!

We’re constantly scouring the Internet looking for articles related to family finances and teaching kids good personal finance habits. You can visit our ever growing list of family finance bookmarks here. We’re up to 2818 now!