BiggerPockets Money Podcast - 183: Mini Millionaires: How to Set Up Your Children for Financial Independence with Rob Phelan
Episode Date: March 29, 2021Those who are part of the FI or FIRE movement know how important it is to set yourself up on the right path in your youth. For parents, how do you get your kids excited about pursuing financial freedo...m? How do you talk to your kids about taxes, retirement accounts, saving, investing, and real estate without them falling asleep? This was Rob Phelan’s question when he started working to build the Choose FI Foundation. The foundation’s goal is simple: help kids achieve financial literacy before they leave high school, let them break free from debt, build towards retirement, and live happier, more secure lives. Contrary to many parent’s beliefs, when children are presented with education regarding them becoming rich, they actually perk up. Rob stresses that a child’s relationship with money is more important than things like amortization schedules and interest rates. Different age groups learn about money in different ways. For example, elementary school children may learn through broad concepts and simple planning, middle school children are ready to learn about retirement and taxes, and high school children can ask the big questions like “what will make me a successful adult?” as well as developing saving and spending habits. Rob created different programs and projects such as his “meal planning” project where he asks kids to plan a week's worth of meals and compare their incomes against their expenses. He talks to high school students about house-hacking and creating cash flow so they aren’t stuck in a job they hate. He also runs The Simple Startup, where he teaches children how to start their own business for free! If you’re a parent or teacher, you can access the Choose Fi Foundation’s full curriculum for free, and get your kids onto a great start! In This Episode We Cover Why Rob chose to focus on financial literacy for children The importance of solidifying crucial financial concepts in children How to help your children develop good saving and spending habits Which topics work best for specific ages Using the “Bank of Dad” idea to teach kids about saving Motivating high school students to reach financial freedom early in life And So Much More! Links from the Show BiggerPockets Money Facebook Group BiggerPockets Forums Finance Review Guest Onboarding ChooseFI Podcast Free resource for parents, 102 Business Ideas for Young Entrepreneurs Check the full show notes here: http://biggerpockets.com/moneyshow183 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast show number 183, where we interview Rob Feelein from the Choose Five Foundation and talk about financial literacy for kids.
Who cares? They're putting money aside. That's for future them. That's a great habit. And then once they're ready to say, okay, you know what, now I get it. That light bulb has gone off and I'm ready to start investing. They're either they have been doing this as a habit already. So they're in a much better financial position or they're in the habit of putting money aside. So it's not a big switch to go from saving to investing and getting that train.
going. Hello, hello, hello. My name is Mindy Jensen, and with me as always is my
doesn't have any kids to teach FI-2 yet, co-hosts Scott Trench. That doesn't mean I can't
learn the theory. I think it'll be really easy. I look forward to it. Yeah, Scott thinks
that kids are just going to be a piece of cake. Scott and I are here to make financial independence
less scary, less just for somebody else, to introduce you to every money story because we
truly believe that financial freedom is attainable for everyone, no matter when or where you're
starting. Whether you want to retire early and travel the world, going to make big time investments
in assets like real estate, start your own business or teach finance to your young kids.
We'll help you reach your financial goals and get money out of the ways that you can launch
yourself towards those dreams. I am super excited to talk to Rob Feelin today. He is from the
Choose Five Foundation. And his, I would say passion is teaching kids about financial literacy
and financial independence in general. And you can tell that he's really passionate
about it in the episode today.
Yeah, I thought it was a great show.
I learned a tremendous amount, really respect his foundation that he's building with
ChooseFiFoundation.org.
And I think you're going to learn a lot.
And there's a ton of resources out there that maybe you were unaware of previously around
teaching kids, your kids, other kids, around financial literacy.
I was certainly unaware of these resources.
So I'm really glad he was able to share them with us today.
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Rob Feelein from the Choose Five Foundation.
Welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast. I'm super excited to talk to you today. Hey, guys, I am so excited to be here. Thank you so much for having me.
Today we're going to talk about a subject that is near and dear to my heart, which is personal finance and financial literacy for kids. I have two kids there, 14 and 10. Oh, no, wow. Oh, I hope she doesn't hear that she's getting it so mad. 14 and 11.
And my 14 year old is going to start high school next year. And she is required to take.
take a personal finance course starting with incoming freshmen, it is now a requirement in
Colorado. And I'm super excited about that. And I've reached out to the instructor. I'm like, hey,
this is my jam. Let's talk about it. Rob, let's talk about your money journey and your
childhood growing up. You clearly know everything about money, right? Oh, of course, yes.
And I feel so bad for that teacher who's going to be like, oh, crap, there's this person at home
who actually knows what they're talking about is going to be able to tell everything that
I do wrong. So that is a nightmare, I'm guessing.
Mindy mentioned a previous recording that she had already reached out to that teacher to volunteer
her help in whatever capacity. And I was like, oh, poor teacher.
They have no idea.
But just to start off, I mean, that is a wonderful thing that there is states that are moving
in that direction. And that is what we really want to see. Like states saying, this is something
that's really important. Let's make this a requirement. And especially from ninth grade,
Like, that is awesome.
So what is the requirement?
They just have to take a personal finance class sometime during high school,
or is it every single year that's something built in?
Is it part of another class, do you know?
0.5 credits in four years.
So, I mean, it's just baby steps starting off.
But, and Tiffany, the Budget Nista, has a New Jersey law that requires,
that's named after her.
I don't have one yet.
That requires financial literacy in New Jersey as well.
So that's really exciting.
And hopefully the other 48 states can catch up.
So if you're listening to this podcast and you've heard this statement from Mindy that,
you know, this is spreading from Colorado.
We want to call this the Jensen effect as, you know, financial literacy spreads to other states.
So we're going to try and make this thing happen.
I like Rob a lot.
So it sounds like Colorado is where Maryland currently is.
There's like some minor requirements that is at least mentioned that kids have to get some exposure
to personal finance education during their high school.
career. Unfortunately, it can look like a very different spectrum depending on each school,
even each teacher and how much they're going to include in it because it's hard to monitor
like have they got a half credit of personal finance education or what the standards that will
look like. But I really hope that it is a start and it's a start towards a full credit of
personal finance education. That would be amazing. I think that's the big goal for most of us
working in this space of personal finance education for kids. Let's just get at least one standalone
in class that's required to graduate so we can say you've got something under your belt that
teaches you about money before you go out into the big world. But I totally missed your question.
I was supposed to go back and talk about myself and we got totally distracted.
Yeah, tell us about your experience with education and money.
So in terms of formal education about money, pretty much nothing. I grew up learning from just
watching my parents do what they did with money. I to this day, I still don't know whether it was a good thing
or bad thing. It's just like I saw how they handled it. I didn't really get much like
conversations about money. I was actually listening to your episode with Aaron Lowry recently.
And very much like if you asked about my parents like money situation anyway, that's none of your
business. Like it's not the business of the kid to know what's going on with the finances of the
household. That's mommy's and daddy's job. And you don't need to know about that. So that's what my
financial education looked like growing up. There wasn't really much transparency about what
was going on. I was encouraged to save, which is, you know, at least a great habit that my parents gave
me. I became an expert at spending their money and saving all of my own, which is something I'm
very proud of. And my parents still highlight to this day, like you're an expert at spending
our money, but not your own. And, you know, they encouraged me to also venture out into a little bit
of entrepreneurship as well. Like, if I wanted something, it wasn't a flat no, it was okay, but you're
going to have to pay for it yourself. So here are some ways that you can make money, whether it's
different chores or different ideas. I lived in New York growing up, so I was able to collect bottles
and cans, take them to a bottle bank and get my five cents to a quarter for each bottle. So that
was my way I started making money when I was in my six, seven, eight-year-old kind of phase.
And that was at least great lessons, I think, looking back now, I can be like, yes, that was
positive money lessons that I got that helped set me on at least a path of thinking about saving
and thinking about making more when I wanted to buy something.
Awesome. Can you give us a very high level overview of your journey with money?
We usually would go 30, 40 minutes in this, but we'll try to condense that in just a two-minute
overview so we can spend most of the time talking about financial literacy for children.
Sure. So grew up that way, like observing, doing different things. I had a couple of many
businesses as I went into my teens. So I had a pinata making company. I tutored a little bit on the
side. I did a baking company in 10th grade as part of a entrepreneurship project in school.
And those were all just kind of mini lessons that came along the way. No formal money education.
Went to college, graduated as a phys ed and math teacher. There was no jobs in Ireland at the time,
which is where I did my undergraduate degree. And so I ended up moving back to the U.S.
I went to Boston and worked as a director of marketing and a full-time soccer coach,
which I had absolutely no qualifications for except maybe as a soccer player. So I was in
natural football.
You went to school in Ireland.
That's good enough.
Yeah.
That's exactly what is.
You have an accent.
You can coach soccer.
And that's all you need.
Did that for a little bit.
Went to grad school for STEM education in New York.
And at that point, I had met my future wife and decided I was going to move down to
Maryland to be with her.
And when I moved in with her, I realized that she just knew way more about money than I did.
So her upbringing had a bit more formal financial education from her dad.
particularly like, you know, how you save, how you invest, which was a big one that I just had no clue about.
And we realized in the beginning that there was this imbalance in our relationship that she was making most of the financial decisions.
And it wasn't something that she embraced or wanted to do.
She wanted more balance in our relationship because she felt like it was a lot of pressure to have to be like in charge of all the financial decisions for a household.
And so that was the point where I started just like digging into a little bit myself.
I think the first book I read was The Automatic Millionaire by David Bach.
And I was like, oh, you know, this is doable.
It's approachable.
It's not like this big mystery that I need to solve.
So I just started digging more.
I found Dave Ramsey, started listening to more podcasts.
And eventually I got asked, did I want to teach personal finance at my high school?
So there is a math class called Contemporary Math, which is like a hybrid of personal finance
and math.
And the teacher who had it was vacating the spot.
And I didn't know enough really to teach at that point.
but I said, sure, why not?
And I spent that summer, like, just diving into the curriculum, figuring, okay, what do kids
need to know about money?
Realized there wasn't really anything great out there.
Like, there's a lot of financial literacy stuff, which is just really dry and boring.
Like, here's how you balance a checkbook.
Here's how you write a check.
Here's how to do a mortgage loan amortization schedule.
Like, who cares?
And what I was realizing from these podcasts I was listening to was it's not about what you know,
per se.
It's about your attitudes, beliefs, values,
your relationship with money.
Like, that's really what's going to determine whether you're going to become wealthy in the future or not.
And because I couldn't find anything like that out there, I approached ChooseFI as one of the
podcasts I listened to the most.
And I said, you know, I'm interested in creating something.
Do you want to partner on this?
And that's when I fell into this whole journey of creating a personal finance curriculum
with ChooseFI.
And we were joined by Danny Mandanza and Mandy Bird.
And we created a pre-K through 12 personal finance curriculum.
End story.
That's awesome.
So are you kind of still pursuing FI for yourself?
Is that like is that is that is still a personal goal?
Yes.
So my wife and I are on our journey to FI.
We've, I guess,
actively been pursuing this for about five years now.
It sounds like we should talk to her about your your FI journey.
At least in the beginning, definitely, yes.
I stole that from Mindy, Mindy had that joke and I just ripped it off.
All right.
But moving on back to children's financial literacy.
I don't know the first thing about this.
I don't know anything at all about teaching children and education in those types of things.
And so, like, where do we even begin that discussion about how to approach this topic with kids,
aside from the really great start you gave us around framing it as an attitude's beliefs,
mindset about money rather than an amortization schedule and balancing a checkbook?
All right.
So let's go back to, you know, you've got kids who are very young.
like they're two, three, four, five, like before a formal school starts.
How do you teach them anything at that age?
You show them.
You show them.
What else?
No idea.
I think it's really easy.
How do you teach your kids something?
They surely know something.
I showed that.
Well, Scott doesn't have any kids.
I showed them.
Here's how you put this Cheerio in your mouth.
Here's the sippy cup.
You start very small and show them.
And then it just builds.
or they watch you and they imitate you.
Yes.
So a lot of observation and you take the time to show them,
and you point out and you voice,
like, this is what I'm doing,
this is why I'm doing it,
you take them through your decision-making process.
But even more so, a lot of our kids learn through play.
Like they imagine different scenarios.
They have a great sense of like wanting to reenact
what they're seeing and process what they're seeing
in their everyday life.
And if you take the time to sit down and play it out with them,
you get a lot of those early lessons through that.
Books are another wonderful example where, you know, kids just like to read with you,
and that's how we teach them to read and recognize words and that sort of thing.
You know, there's lots of different strategies that we use with kids just to teach them random things,
and the same thing happens with money.
So if you're taking them out to the store, like, explain to them like, oh, if you want this,
we have to pay for it.
Where does that money come from?
Well, mommy and daddy or whoever has to go to work, and when they're at work,
that's when they make the money that allows us to get these different things.
and you just scale up the concept as time progresses.
If they have questions, you know, that's the best time to just sit down with them and be like,
okay, let's talk through what this particular question was about, whether it was,
why do you have to go to work, why can't I have this particular item or toy,
where you said no to something, why did you say no?
And talking about like, okay, there's certain things we can and can't have.
There's needs, there's wants.
And just having conversations, I think, with your kids is a wonderful way to do.
and especially if they do show any curiosity in the area that you're willing to sit down with them
and explore those topics with them.
Then as they get older, the lessons that you have can change.
Involving them in the financial decision-making process of the household is a really empowering thing for a child.
Like if you can give them any sort of feeling of ownership over what's happening,
they're going to show an interest and they're going to be much more compliant with, like, say,
you're trying to get out of debt, you're trying to get rid of some credit card stuff,
you're paying down student loans, you are trying to build wealth.
If you're involving your child in that decision-making process,
like maybe not sharing the huge amount of stress or overwhelmed that you're feeling,
like we don't necessarily want to burden our children with that.
But certainly saying, like, okay, you know, this month we are going to try and save
$1,000 and these are the different ways we're going to try and do it.
What else do you think we could do to try and reach that goal?
And let them come up with some ideas, like, oh, we could maybe spend less on cereal this
month or something like that.
or like, there's something I can cut out.
Like, they have something that they can contribute to the situation.
I think kids see that in here that.
So we start our curriculum at pre-K is when we start having formal just like
conversations and lessons about money.
So through books, through different play activities.
But this goes all the way up to high school, to college.
I mean, we can have these lessons at any point in our adulthood, I feel anyway.
I imagine, you know, lacking any expertise,
but I imagine there's a continuum where, you know, pre-key,
is one level for, you know, for a second or similarly in that same bucket, but a little bit more
advanced and that kind of stuff. How do you bucket the curriculum? Like, where are some of the
milestones in terms of the real differences in education you can start giving your kids over as they,
as they age? So the nice thing is if you are in a situation where you can commit to these lessons
from a pre-K through 12, like they, like you said, it just kind of builds up on itself rather than
the scenario Mindy was putting out where maybe the first experience,
anyone has a personal finance education is in high school where you have to try and go from beginning to end in one space.
So thinking about like literacy as well, like there's, you know, there's levels where you learn to read.
Like you start with smaller words, you start with bigger words, you go into sentences, and we progress that as we go.
Same kind of idea with money.
So in the beginning, we're talking about things like you just have to pay for something.
You have to have patience, delay gratification, but without using that word.
So you want something, well, let's talk about how we could say for it.
And then as the students get older, we start bringing in more strategies of, well, here's how you save.
Here's different types of accounts you can save in.
Let's talk about now investing and getting your money to grow instead.
So I would say like early elementary school, it's very just basic broad concepts.
You might not even be using money terms very much.
It's more so story and play.
But then as they go into elementary school, we start talking to things like meal planning.
So thinking ahead, having a plan for what you're going to do with your time, with your money, with your food.
And by the time they're getting to middle school, that's when we're really starting to introduce some of the more complex, you know, in quotation mark topics.
So talking about like retirement, what are taxes?
And then when you're hitting high school, we're saying what does a kid need to know before they leave school that would allow them to be successful as an adult?
And building all the way up to, you know, here's how you get started investing.
That's the key one is like, can you get kids to have bank accounts?
Can you get them to start building habits for saving and investing?
and then making better buying decisions when things come around like student loans or new cars or houses,
that sort of thing.
So I start my kid on this at four years old and we start talking about money.
How rich should they be by the time they graduate high school?
I don't know if I could put a number on that, but man, if you started at what age you said,
four or five?
Four, yeah, four or five.
So I heard this wonderful concept like bank of dad where, you know, you're encouraging your kid to save
and you're just matching everything they save.
and at some point, then you start investing it
and you just keep showing them how it grows.
Like, they could have like $25, $30,000 by the time they're graduating high school.
And if they just kept adding like $100 a month to that,
I mean, they would be in their millions probably by what, mid-30s?
Yeah.
All right.
Just get started.
I'm hoping that my kids can start a pet sitting business
as the country kind of opens up in the next few months.
Fingers crossed.
Yes.
I want them to start a pet sitting business.
A legitimate pet sitting business.
They will pay taxes.
They will, I mean, pay taxes.
What is it, like $12,000 that you have to make before you can pay taxes?
But I want them to max out their Roth IRA.
And that is a really boring thing to do.
And my kids have been lectured about money since birth.
So every once in a while, they're like, mom, I don't care.
Mom, I don't want to hear it.
And I'm like, no, no, do you have to?
I started talking to them about the concept of a.
Roth IRA and Daphne's like, she's the 11 year old.
She's like, oh, mom, this is so boring.
I'm not even listening.
Wow.
Thanks for being so honest.
But she's right.
That's a hard one.
Yeah.
That is a hard one.
Look at the amount of runway she has, Scott.
If she starts contributing to her Roth IRA when she's 11, look at how much wealth she
can accumulate before she even graduates high school if she maxes that out every year.
And how much fun is it for an 11-year-old to spend time working and earning income and then putting it all in the Roth IRA?
Zero percent fun.
She will revolt.
So the bank of mom and dad will match her when she puts money into the Roth IRA.
And even like saying that they're putting all of it in there, that's probably where some of the problem starts.
Like if they're going to earn money, maybe keeping a portion of it for.
spending like they can use that for whatever they want and you know I like the families who say like
when our kids make money either it's gifts or chores or their own business that they have a spend save
invest and give allocation to what they do with their money so 50% of it goes into investing 10% goes
to saving they give away 10% to whatever cause they feel as important to them at the time and then
what am I left with 20% they can do whatever they want with and I think that is a bit more
attractive to kids. Like, okay, there's a reason why I'm earning the money. Like,
there's something personal that I'm gaining out of this because, yeah, we're just trying
to build habits at that point. Like, they, they're not getting the concept of retirement. Like,
that's just so far away in the future. That's like four or five lifetimes away for them at that time.
So it's a hard one. You're trying to build that habit. And if you can just say, okay,
we're going to build these good habits of saving and investing at that age. I mean, if you do that
from a young age, by the time they graduate high school, they're at Coast Fye. Like, they could
just stop investing at that point, probably let it ride until they hit.
65 and they've got their millions, they're good to go. And then anything they do afterwards is just
bringing that day closer and closer. And they don't have to be stuck in a job they hate or a
career that they decide they just don't love anymore. It gives them so much freedom when they
don't have to be tied to it. And I've worked some really crappy jobs. I've worked some pretty,
I have one boss who shall remain nameless. I'm not the president of her fan club.
and I was there because I had to be.
And giving your kids the freedom, setting these habits in place so that they can have this freedom.
Coast FI, I would like you to clarify because there's all these different types of FI that are running around out there.
So I just want to make sure we're on the same page.
But that seems like a really great, powerful gift that you can give a kid.
Yeah, I mean, I think everyone likes coining their own terms.
So there'll be a Jensen file.
out there soon, I'm sure. But CoSci is essentially where you have invested enough money and the idea
of financial dependence is, in loose terms, you have 25 times your annual expenses in investment so
that if it's earning 8% interest you could live off for and your money would never disappear.
So you're at that financial independence point that you can live off your investments for the
rest of your days. CoastFi would be, I've got $100,000 in my accounts and if I'm okay with retiring at 65,
I know right now if I don't touch those accounts anymore, I stop contributing. By the time I get to 65, I will have my $1.2 million that I need to retire. So that's our FI number in our family. So we are at that kind of borderline on Coast FI because I'm 31 now. So if we just let it ride for another 34 years, we would have enough to retire off of by 65. So everything we add now is just bringing our potential retirement date closer, even though I don't think either was of any plans to retire early.
season is one of the only times all year when most people actually look at their full financial
picture, including income, spending, savings, investments, the whole thing. And if you're like most
folks, it can be a little eye-opening. That's why I like Monarch. It helps you see exactly where
your money is going, and more importantly, where your taxed refund can make the biggest impact.
Because the goal isn't just to look backward, it's to actually make progress. Simplify your
finances with Monarch. Monarch is the all-in-one personal finance tool designed to make your life
easier. It brings your entire financial life, including budgeting, accounts and investments,
net worth, and future planning together in one dashboard on your phone or your laptop.
Feel aware and in control of your finances this tax season and get 50% off your Monarch
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So let's try more of a specific situation because it sounds like 11 is too many lifetimes away from money to,
you know, there's things you can do as a parent to set up your child downstream,
and things like Mindy mentioned.
but maybe like a junior or a senior in high school, it's starting to become more real and imminent.
There's probably some work experience, you know, at the very least over the summer that most of those folks are getting in some capacity.
And the real world is not too far away, or at least college is not too far away.
How do I reach or motivate a person in that situation effectively with content like this?
And that's the brilliant question for educators all the time is like, you know, how do I
motivate my students to want to take action? And we have some problems with adults in the same boat.
Like, you know, you have all this wonderful information. You're looking at them like, why aren't you
doing this? And it's really a case of some kids will, some kids won't. Some kids are ready to
receive that message. Some kids are not. And we're trying to give them as much great information
as we can and trying to get them to take as many actions as possible to put themselves on that
path or at least give themselves opportunities in the future. So like, you know,
many talking about an 11-year-olds, they're not going to care about retirement. But if we can
just train them into that habit of putting a percentage of their money aside, whether it's going
into a Roth account, a brokerage, a savings account, who cares, they're putting money aside.
That's for future them. That's a great habit. And then once they're ready to say, okay,
you know what, now I get it. That light bulb has gone off and I'm ready to start investing.
They're either they have been doing this as a habit already. So they're in a much better financial
position or they're in the habit of putting money aside so it's not a big switch to go from saving
to investing and getting that train going. For my junior seniors, like I teach seniors this class
every year, so fall and spring, I teach this personal finance class. And my goal is always that
by the end, they have a checking account, a savings account, and they have at least set up a Roth IRA.
So even if they don't put anything into it, I want the mechanics to be there so that when they do decide to
get started that it's there for them to do it. So we're taking away as many barriers to entry as
possible, and I'm trying to make sure they know exactly how to get started when they do find that
motivation. But yeah, a lot of times it's incentives for just getting started. Like if there's
something that they really want to do, in my case, like I can offer incentives in terms of,
I have a local bank sponsor this project we do in the curriculum called the passport to financial
independence. And it's 40 actions that if a high schooler took these 40 actions and put them in
place, they will be on like a supercharged path to financial dependence. So it's opening a check
account, opening a savings account, opening a brokerage account, a Roth IRA, contributing to some of those,
having conversations with retired folks about, you know, what are some of your dues and don'ts
for managing your money in the future? Like, there's a whole bunch of these different tasks that
they can do. And I got a local bank to sponsor it. And if they reach five, they get a prize. If they
reach 10, they get a different prize, 15, 20, all the up to 40. And then if the entire class
reaches 200 of these financial behavioral changes, they sponsor a pizza party for the class.
I mean, totally unrelated to being a responsible saver for retirement. But if that's what it
takes to get them to start making those financial habits and putting those things in place,
I consider that a huge win. Could I get a copy of this 40-step list? Can we share that with our
listeners. Yes. So that is in the Chusify curriculum, which is absolutely free for anybody to use,
by the way. Parents, if you want to do this with your kids, it's for you. Teachers, if you want to
do this with your students, it's for you, homeschool cohorts, you can use this. So yeah, it's at
choosifyfoundation.org and just go into like the pre-K12 stuff and start exploring. It's right,
one of the first things you'll find is our passport to financial independence. I'm going to send
this to my daughter's teacher and sorry, Mr. Benz. She's already getting stuff.
What percentage of your seniors would you say buy in to this concept of five?
If I have an average class of 30, I probably get five or six who will really start, like,
their eyes spark up when they see like the compound interest calculators that, you know,
this idea of not having to work for the rest of their lives is really exciting,
mostly because they've been working already for a couple of years and they're like,
you know what, the work sucks.
I don't like this.
So they get that a little bit already.
There's another bunch then who at the end, when we do our surveys, they'll be like,
you know, this was really interesting.
I learned a lot.
I can tell from the measures that we take that they haven't put a lot of the steps in place yet,
but they also are telling me, like, I've got very short-term savings goals, such as paying
for college, so I'm not ready to start investing yet.
I'm like, okay, cool, you recognize that there is at least a big expense coming your
way and you're saving for that.
That's fine.
And I always encourage them to come back to me afterwards if they have questions or they're ready
to get started at a later point, or they have access to them.
materials, that sort of thing. And then there's always going to be probably less than half who,
it seems like they're not listening to anything, but then I've had students come back to me a
couple years later and be like, oh, yeah, like I started a Roth IRA and, you know, I knew about
that from class. I was like, oh, I literally thought you were sleeping the entire time. So that's
wonderful. It was, it was osmosis. It was going in. I think that the stakes are so high there
because if you can get somebody to buy in during class and immediately go out and optimize their
college experience and then their first couple of years in the workforce for this. I mean,
that's how you get $500,000 in net worth by the time you're 22, 23, 24, potentially. If you know,
you throw in a house hack, you set up the Roth and you save and you work through college and that kind of stuff.
And it's just a completely unfair head start in life, compared to you.
to everybody else. You could just have total power over everything you're going to do with your career
and those types of things. And so I think, I just think like the work you're doing is great and the stakes
couldn't, you know, couldn't be higher in some ways around it because it's just human potential
that's that's going to be realized by some of those students. Have you gone on to see any outcomes like
that in your time? So I'm still at that stage where I've been teaching this for four years now.
So five years ago I started, you know, our own journey. And then four years, I started teaching it.
So the kids who graduated that first year are just starting to come out of college now.
But I've had students reach out to me.
One student in particular is down in Florida, and he reached out to me like a year later and was like, oh, by the way, like I'm running my own business down on college campus.
Like I'm drop shipping all of this stuff from, I think it's from China.
He's like just importing it, marking it up and selling it on again.
And he's like, I wear my like cowboy hat around the place because that's my brand.
So everyone knows me when they see me.
And like he's just thinking about things differently.
And I'm pretty sure he's just cash flow.
his way through college with his side business, and this kid is going to be killing it by the time he
comes out. I've had some students, you know, they'll come to me and they're like, oh, my grandfather
does real estate investing, and I'm really interested in that. So like when I get to that section,
they're interested. And they may have no interest whatsoever in the stocks, the budgeting, the saving,
but real estate investing for some reason is something they're really interested in. So giving them the
tools to say, okay, well, if you want to start investing at like 19 years old, here are the things you're
going to have to put in place to be able to do that. Like, we're going to have to talk about getting that
credit score started and moving up as fast as possible. Here's what house hacking looks like.
Here's, you know, we have mortgage loan officers come in and they'll talk to them like,
okay, you're at this age. This is what you're going to need to do to get a loan from us at that
age to buy a house. Or here's how you would cash flow it. Or here's how you would hack your way to
owning property. And I think kids light up with that stuff. I'm like, I don't have any interest
in real estate investing right now, but they do. And it's so important to foster that interest.
Yeah, I know. I'm sorry. I'm on bigger pocket saying that.
That's okay.
And I don't know anything about this.
I've gone in and taught a few personal finance classes at the local high school here in Denver.
In the first few years, most of the kids were asleep, and I was very nervous and effective.
In the last couple of years, it seems like there's a little bit more engagement with that.
But they seem to engage with the idea of the house hack and the duplex investment in those types of things.
Have you taught that concept about using real estate at all, or is that kind of beyond the scope of your program?
Oh, no, absolutely. I have different guests come in and do, you know, Zoom classes basically with the students or if they're local and they can come in, they do that. And, yeah, some will talk about real estate investing, like just buying rental properties and using that as a wealth generating tool or an investment tool. But we've had some people come in as well and talk about house hacking and particularly for college. Like, you know, if you could buy a property in a college town, you move in there, you bring in five or six your buddies.
They cover the entire mortgage plus some so your cash flow positive on it.
You finish five years.
At that point, you can either sell it on and buy something else in the new place you're
going to live or just keep it there and let it keep cash flowing for you.
Like, they light up at that stuff because, yeah, they're like, oh, I need to live somewhere.
Why not have other people pay me to live there instead of me paying rent or something for myself?
So yeah, it's a very easy concept, I think, to grasp onto.
And it's just making sure that they are putting the things in place that would allow them to
buy a property like that at a young age.
Because that's the hardest part is that if they go into it with no credit score, no down payment, nothing like that, it just becomes a harder move to make at that young age.
And no landlord to, you know, yell at you if you're, you know, hosting a responsible social event with your friends as well.
So another advantage for the college house hack.
Yeah.
I mean, you unfortunately take on that position of being the responsible landlord.
Like, if it's your house hack and you're inviting your buddies in there, you know, you have to think about, okay, do I trust these people to not socially?
responsible parties at my house and just trash it.
And some of them will look at it that way.
And I find that's always a fun conversation too when we talk about having roommates and
the idea of picking your buddies versus like actually evaluating potential roommates for like,
are they going to be productive members of the household?
Are they going to be an absolute pain in the butt for like getting rent from or contributing
to the chores of the house?
Are they going to be like party animals who are going to be wrecking the place?
And kind of like picking teams or, you know, doing
group projects in school. It's like, you know, your buddies don't always make the best team members
and it goes the exact same way when you talk about living with someone. You've mentioned earlier that you
felt that the students who had worked and kind of understood how work is work is work, especially
your first couple of jobs in high school with that. They're the ones who seem to engage the most
in your class. Is that, my remembering that correctly? Yeah. Either they work for someone else or
they've started their own business. But yeah, the ones who have worked and they have income and they
they recognize that, you know, their minimum wage income doesn't necessarily go as far as they think.
You know, even $15,000 a year sounds like a lot, but it's not really that much in the grand
scheme of things. They're the ones who are kind of like, okay, yeah, I'm seeing this
scenario play out. Like, it's not like a lot of times their parents are giving them more financial
responsibility either intentionally or by circumstance. So I have some students who are working
almost full-time hours because they're supporting their family at the same time. So they see very
firsthand like okay this is what paycheck to paycheck feels like i don't like it let's change that do you
think um you know rich dad poor dad there's a parable in there where where they they talk about how
the rich dad basically had the kids working this terrible job for pennies an hour or whatever with that
that was how they learned the lesson of like oh yep i would rather be good with money than bad with
money as part of your program do you ever think about how to expose kids healthily to
that reality early on to get them motivated for it?
Is that cruel and unusual?
I don't know what's appropriate with this kind of stuff.
But it seems like that's a powerful lesson
to have that job that's kind of bad
and not get the economic reward that you're hoping for.
Well, the school frowns on me using the students
as unpaid labor for a different thing,
so I can't do that.
But there are some wonderful simulations out there.
But the foundation can do that, right?
the phone.
Well, I think it's super powerful just for the kids that have been working there.
When you're in high school, you probably don't have an awesome paying job.
Yeah, there's the kid that always, there's always that one kid who's got, like,
when I was in high school, one of the kids I went to high school with was a bouncer at a bar.
And I don't know how he was able to do that legally.
And maybe he wasn't, but he was a big dude.
And he was making a lot of money.
So, of course, this lesson would kind of fall on deaf ears.
He's 17.
He's working at a bar.
I bet he was drinking.
I'm not going to name him by name, Chris, but I bet he was drinking underage.
And why would he not want to do that?
He's got the whole world.
But when your first job is working at Dairy Queen and you're like, wow, I paid how much to FICO?
Who is FICO?
Why did they take half of my paycheck?
Because I'm making $3.35 an hour.
And I thought I was going to have a big paycheck.
And now I have like $25.
and that was really hard.
I would have been much more receptive to this information
than probably Chris would have
because I was working the hard job,
and it's not that hard at the Dairy Queen.
But it's still like you're on your feet and you're working.
And now I get to sit in a chair and type
and talk about real estate.
And I love my job.
And it's not so difficult anymore.
So I think the kids that have the experience
are really going to be more receptive to it,
especially if they've got the crappy experience.
I don't know if that was a good,
example because I mean they got ice cream and you're just sitting in a chair in front of a computer like
I don't know if that was a good one you weren't the seven to nine shift at my first I got I got one my first job
was at peer one imports um really and there there was nothing yeah I went I went around and I applied
to it was it was uh 2008 or 2007 right in the middle of the recession and so I had to go to 20 places
just driving around the shopping center applying for every single job I'm in high school just had
my first car and I get the job and I'm I unpack the boxes from the truck. I stock the shelves.
I load the couch onto the car at 8 o'clock at night on Saturday. I unwrapped this enormous frog
ornament that goes into someone's garden that's three feet tall and like made of stone. That's
ridiculously heavy. We sold six of them in the summer that I worked there somehow.
Not scar at all by this. I had no I had no I made like I think I don't know eight dollars
or whatever, like very close to minimum wage. And I had no interest whatsoever in making use of the
employee discounts at the time that was awarded. Thank goodness, right? And I just remember,
like, that was, like, nothing wrong with it. They didn't treat me poorly. There was nothing
wrong. The break room was, like, super depressing at the place. And I was like, this is not the kind of
job that I want to do. And I think that was a powerful. I never, I was not motivated about financial
independence, of course, for 10 more years following that or five more years following that.
But I was motivated to get better and better jobs each time after that.
So I don't know.
That's why I'm kind of, I kind of think that, you know, maybe there's a benefit to guiding
your kid towards a pretty lousy work experience one summer.
And maybe there's a, maybe that's a good kick in the pants to get going on the five journey.
I don't know.
So maybe there'll be some angry comments.
on this episode for me saying that, but possibly or like the fans of Dairy Queen coming back at
you too.
I, it was a hard, not hard job.
It was fast paced.
Like when you, during the summer at Dairy Queen, there's a line.
And from I worked the seven to nine shift, which is the busy, busy shift.
Two hours.
That kind of sucked.
Because then my whole night is ruined because I was, I think I was 15 at the time.
So my whole night is ruined.
I can't do anything because I got to go to work.
And then after work, it's curfew, so I have to be home.
So, but for two hours.
So I got six bucks.
Yeah.
That is tough.
Yeah.
So, I'll give you that one.
It's tough.
My 14-year-old.
I'm sorry.
Go back to your question of, like, how you recreate this.
You know, in the curriculum, we use simulations.
There are some wonderful simulations out there that basically force kids to take on a job and budget and
do all of these different things.
And I actually wrote an article the other week about just different types of video games that are
out there that, you know, ask kids to budget and cash flow managed and all those sorts of things.
Like, there are examples of this out there.
But yeah, you can recreate a lot of these digitally and, you know, some of my favorites,
like they pretty much make students, like poor college students, like they are literally
trying to stretch to the end of the month.
Like every last penny, it's always a hard month.
And most times they come out of it being like, that sucked.
Like, I don't want to do that.
And if they say that on like job done, we did it.
Like you at least get it.
That like living paycheck to paycheck, not making enough income.
income is a problem.
And that's kind of that first step to like getting students to adopt some of these mindsets
and mentalities and listen to lessons is just recognize there as a problem out there with
how people are doing money right now.
And then the fun part is, you know this, there's two ways to attack the problem.
You either decrease your expenses or you increase your income.
And for me, like the one that lights me up is increasing income.
Like I don't really have any interest in cutting my expenses to the bone.
I keep them within reason, but you always want income to be greater than expenses.
you've got to attack the equation from one or both sides, and increasing income is always a fun one to talk about.
So, like, bringing entrepreneurship into a personal finance curriculum is something that we do in the Chesify Foundation, and it's just a really fun unit to teach.
Okay, so I'm one of the parents that does not have a child in your class specifically.
Where can I go to learn about, I'm not one of the, I'm not a parent yet.
I'm just pretending I am for the purposes of this question.
But where can I go to get access to learning about how to teach my child about this or help other children in the community if that's something I want to do?
Can you tell us a little bit about the work you're doing on that front?
Yeah. So with Chusify Foundation, this curriculum is freely accessible to anybody wants to use it.
You go to choosifyfoundation.org.
And then if you want the curriculum part particularly, you can get to forward slash pre-K12.
and what you'll see there is a pre-K curriculum, a kindergarten, a first, second, a third, a third through fifth, a six through eight, and a nine through 12.
So it's banded based on the grade level of the students.
And you go in there, you will find it divided up by units and topics.
So, you know, you can talk about budgeting.
You can talk about taxes.
You can talk about investing, insurance, whatever you want to.
You will find it in there.
And if you are a parent who just wants to bring this home, find a topic that you think your kid might be interested in talking about,
explore maybe what a lesson for that might look like. And you don't necessarily have to teach it like
you would in a classroom. You say, okay, what's the idea going on in here? What activities is this
based off of? Is there a project involved? And then let's just do that with the kids at home and see,
like, do they grab onto that idea or is it a bust? And maybe we need to try this another day.
Some of my favorite ones to do are our meal planning project. So you basically, as a high school
student, we have this for each age range and it kind of gets simplified as you go further down. But at the
high school level. I asked my students to budget for an entire week's worth of food. So let's plan out
three meals a day for seven days. What are the meals? What ingredients do you need? How much do you think it
would cost to buy those at a grocery store? So just like a quick estimate of what you think it would
cost. Then we go to like online shopping apps like Instacart and we find out how much it actually
would cost. They realized their week shop was like $250 because they wanted like steak every night of the
week or they wanted all these expensive things. And then we're like, okay, well, based on the income you
have right now or what you think you're going to have, we want to budget 10 to 15% for food. How do we
get our food cost to come down into that, to fit that budget? And so they have to start problem
solving through things like increasing the quantities of different meals so they can eat the same
meal multiple times a week or what foods are cheaper than others. How do I go generic versus brand name?
and it's a wonderful kind of thought exercise for them
in terms of like how do I navigate buying food
and thinking about it from a cost perspective as well
and that can be done over the dinner table,
it can be done in a classroom,
like it can be done anywhere.
So looking for things like that,
I think are a wonderful thing to bring home to your students
or to your kids at home.
And is this, is this,
and so we go to choosefI Foundation.org
and I will be able to go there
and find the lesson plan
and materials to prompt these types of that, like that particular exercise and more?
Absolutely.
Awesome.
Is that all free?
All free.
So the foundation exists to spread personal finance education to as many people as possible
for free.
And we're trying to reach everyone as opposed to like just the upper white middle class society.
Like we want something that is applicable, relevant, and accessible to everyone.
So if you have, you know, schools in your district, you're like, this is something.
something they might be interested in. They don't have huge budgets. They're looking for something
free. Send them that link and say like, hey, here's something you might want to check out.
You can include this in an English lesson, a math lesson, a social studies lesson that doesn't
have to be a personal finance class. You can do book studies on different financial topics.
Like, I do a book study on Richest Man in Babylon in my class. And that's just one of my favorite
things to do with my students. At the end, they're always like, wow, this book is really old,
but man, it's relevant. Like, even though they're talking like in this weird Shakespearean
of language like it still makes sense i get it um so yeah there's lots of different ways you can use it
and i would just suggest check it out and see you know look for something that the title stands out to you
you're like okay this could be interesting for me or for my own kids um you could go into a high school
and lead a mini class based on one of these things go to your local library and put on a class for
adults using the high school curriculum it's pretty much the same level as what an adult needs to
know um yeah there's lots of potential for it and if you're like and you have materials all the way from
pre-k to grade 12, is that right?
Yes.
Awesome.
So if I'm a parent, I can just go in there, look at my, look at the materials sorted by
those age brackets, and then get some ideas, pick the one I like, send it to my kid,
or I can just go through a curriculum line by line in the order you present.
Is that right?
Absolutely.
And if you're like, I want a hands-off approach, like I don't have the time to do this,
or my kid just doesn't listen to me, which we do get a lot from parents.
Like, you know, they want to learn from somebody that's just not me.
we're starting to create now some self-paced asynchronous stuff for students to do,
starting with third through fifth grade.
So if you have a third through fifth grader at home, you're like,
I want to kind of put them through a personal finance class that they can just sit in front
of a computer and take themselves.
We are starting to create that now.
So you can go find that as well on the Chesify Foundation page.
And that is a paid product.
So that is not a free one, but all the materials are available for free as well.
It's just if you want somebody.
actually teaching it to your kid, we can make that happen to.
Are you a nonprofit?
We are a nonprofit, absolutely.
So if you do want to donate or support what we are doing, we will absolutely accept those
donations and give you that tax deduction.
All right.
And if I buy the materials, that would go, that would, that goes to a nonprofit.
All stays within the foundation.
You have to fund what we are doing.
Great.
Well, awesome.
Thank you for sharing all of that.
Sounds like a great resource.
So go check that out at choosefifififoundation.org.
And you could find a lot of those materials and more of the stuff we talked about
and maybe get some ideas for teaching your kids or kids in the community about,
about FI right there.
So thank you, Rob.
Thank you.
All right, Rob.
In addition to the ChooseFI Foundation, where can people find more about you?
So chooseifyFoundation.org is a great place to find me.
And then my own business is called The Simple Startup, where I teach 10 to 18-year-olds how to start
their very own businesses.
you can find me there at www.
the simple startup.com.
All right.
You're going to need a business
if you're 10 to 18 years old
and you want to begin funding a Roth
or if you're a parent
and you want your kid to begin funding a Roth,
they're going to need some income.
So that's a good way to couple it
with Mindy's approach.
Mindy, your kids make money,
they don't want to put it in a Roth.
So you give them,
you match the dollars,
they get to spend those
and those go into the Roth.
And then their income can go into the Roth.
Yeah.
So if you've got your kids at home
wanting to do that dog sitting business
and you're like,
I don't know how to help
them get it started, the simple startup is a great way for them to do that. It's like a 10-week
program, all virtual, where I walk them through the steps of getting that business started.
And the key thing is they do it for free and they do it fast. So it's not like, let's write a
10-page business plan and take six months to get this thing started. They're going to start
their business as fast as possible and grow it based on what their customers want.
And this is not a nonprofit. This is your personal business, right? Yes, this is a for-profit
business. Okay. And do you touch on taxes for the kids? Because I do want to
teach them about paying taxes because that is a big cold slap in the face when you get your first
real job. So in terms of the simple startup, I give them the general, like you should put about
30% of it aside in a savings account to account for taxes and then, you know, you work with your
parents at tax time to figure out what that looks like for you because if they're claim
dependence, then it's a different situation versus if you're independent. So you had nothing more
than just that because not certified to give official tax information.
But yeah, definitely thinking about it.
Yeah, I love that you get them thinking about that.
I see these people who are like, I made so much money on this.
You're like, ooh, save some of that because the tax man will come after you.
Yeah.
And like for kids, like they probably will get to keep the majority of it unless they're making an exceptional amount of money.
But at the same time, like you still want them doing a tax return and going through that process of how to do it.
Yeah.
And if you're paying taxes, that means you're making a lot of money.
That's actually a really good thing is to be able to pay taxes.
And you have the bank of dad.
You can also have the tax of dad, right?
Yeah.
That sounds fun.
It's like if you're doing chores, it's like, oh, you made a dollar off doing this,
but then dad takes tax back, so it's really 70 cents.
Here you go.
I'll go well with the meal planning exercise after you introduce that.
Now they can begin paying portions of their own meals.
All right.
This is so valuable for parents.
I hope so.
And I hope, like, as parents, you're looking at this, like, okay, it doesn't have to do this big, scary thing.
Like, I don't have to be a financial expert to talk to my kids about this stuff.
Share what you're doing.
Look for some games, activities, stories, play stuff that you can do that revolves around money.
And just, like, you know, experience it with your kids.
Learn alongside them.
And the foundation curriculum is there for you if you need a little bit more guidance and support.
Yeah, this sounds like a really great.
program, sister program with the Doug Nordman and Carol Pitner book, Secrets of a Money Savvy
Family. Yes, they had a wonderful book, great advice for raising, you know, kids and in talking
to Doug, I think, yeah, it fits perfectly with what they feel about how you raise your kids.
Like, you have those conversations, you do that bank of dad or mom idea, you give them
responsibility for small amounts of money and increase the amount of decision-making power they
have with their money as time goes on. Yeah, I love it.
Rob, thank you so much for taking time out of your busy day of being a teacher and running an entrepreneurial startup and running the Choose Five Foundation education program to talk to us about this because I do think this is really, really, really important for all kids to know.
I am going to go blast Mr. Benson.
He's going to be like, curse you, Rob.
I had my whole thing planned out, but this one's better.
No worry.
Send him my email and I'll take all those questions and abuse as well.
Thank you guys so much for having me.
I really appreciate the chance to talk to you in your audience.
Yeah, thank you so much, Rob.
We'll talk to you soon.
Bye.
Okay, that was Rob Feeleyn.
Scott, what did you think of the episode today?
Really enjoyed it, learned a lot.
A topic that I don't really know much about, but I was fascinated by
and love his passion, energy, commitment, dedication, organization with respect to
attacking the problem of financial literacy for kids.
I'm super excited to go check it out.
Like I said, before my daughter's taking a class this summer.
or I'm sorry, this fall. And I am really, really excited to share it with her teacher. I hope he is
equally excited to get it from me. Yeah, my understanding is that teachers are really enthusiastic for
advice from parents on how to teach their classes. So look forward to seeing how that turns out, Mindy,
for you. It's hard for me to be like, oh, this is my whole life. I'm super excited about this.
I don't want to overwhelm you, but oh, I've got so many resources. Please tap me. So I have to
temper my excitement, but I'm definitely going to share this with my daughter's teacher.
So, Scott, we didn't do the traditional famous four with our guest today, but we do have a joke,
courtesy of our producer, Eric's children, Cora and Patrick.
Cora and Patrick say, where does Frosty keep his money?
Frosty the Snowman.
In the Snowbank.
Ah, that's excellent.
You got some smart kids, Eric.
special thanks to our whole podcast team, including Eric, Dave, Kevin.
Jamil.
Jamil, we show up, Mindy and I, and we record, and magic happens,
and you guys get a fully finished, fully edited podcast recording.
You don't hear all of our gaps, you know, the occasional naughty word when we screw up,
those types of things.
They do a fantastic job, and we're really appreciative of them.
So thank you guys.
Big shout out to our podcast team, everybody.
And thanks for all you do.
Yes, they definitely are the ones who are bringing you the fabulousness every week.
Okay, we would like to say thank you for joining us today.
We always love talking to you.
If your children have a joke that would be on Scott's mental level,
please feel free to email it to us, Mindy at Biggerpockets.com or Scott at Biggerpockets.com.
Scott, should we get out of here?
Let's do it.
From episode 183 of the Bigger Pockets Money podcast, he is Scott Trench,
and I am Mindy Jensen saying, if we don't see it,
See you around.
We'll see you square.
