Consumer and financial literacy
Curriculum Connections resources for consumer and financial literacy identify content in the Australian Curriculum that supports the development of consumer and financial capability in young people. They provide links to units of work and interactive activities that assist teachers in their planning and delivery of high-quality teaching and learning programs.
There are strong connections between consumer and financial literacy and the Australian Curriculum. Consumer and financial literacy provides a number of engaging and authentic contexts from which to deliver the Australian Curriculum. The Australian Curriculum offers rich opportunities for interdisciplinary approaches that support the development of consumer and financial literacy in young Australians. Consumer and financial literacy features explicitly in Mathematics and Humanities and Social Sciences.
Within Mathematics, the number and algebra content strand includes money and financial mathematics as a sub-strand. In other areas of the Mathematics curriculum, students learn to accurately make computations and check results; interpret numerical, graphical and other information; and construct and use financial models to help make financial decisions.
Within Humanities and Social Sciences, consumer and financial literacy is one of four key organising ideas in Economics and Business. Here, students explore how making responsible and informed decisions about consumer issues, money management and assets can affect the individual’s and the community’s quality of life, sense of security and awareness of future options.
There are also connections to consumer and financial literacy in other learning areas and in the other dimensions of the Australian Curriculum – the general capabilities and cross-curriculum priorities.
The purpose of this curriculum connection is twofold. It is designed to:
- guide teachers in identifying content in the Australian Curriculum that supports the teaching and learning of consumer and financial literacy
- connect teachers to a range of interdisciplinary resources that have been developed by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (Moneysmart for teachers) and the Australian Taxation Office (Tax, Super and You) to support the teaching and learning of consumer and financial literacy.
As shown in the figure below, some Australian Curriculum learning areas and general capabilities more comprehensively support aspects of consumer and financial literacy than others, while the three cross-curriculum priorities provide relevant contexts for consumer and financial education.
Representation of consumer and financial literacy in the Australian Curriculum
Content linking to consumer and financial literacy has been identified and selected for relevance. However, there are broader opportunities for students to learn about and develop skills in consumer and financial literacy throughout the Australian Curriculum. Schools and teachers are encouraged to identify opportunities and create learning programs that will meet their students’ needs and interests. Since what goes on in the real world is essentially interdisciplinary, teaching programs that develop consumer and financial literacy can weave content from all dimensions of the Australian Curriculum in ways that are authentic and meaningful.