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Empowering Teachers and Students at School

Innovative Educators

Innovative ideas and programs are what turns information into learning.

The following Featured Innovative Educator is finding new ways to teach practical money skills in the classroom.


Brenda WileyKaren Pauly

Liverpool High School, Liverpool, NY
Teaches Financial Planning, Securities, Accounting


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Liverpool, New YorkOut of Class Preparation
As background, I spent five days at the New York Stock Exchange, working with financial teachers from all over the country to learn more about investing with the NYSE and observing active trading on the floor of the market. Currently, I am on sabbatical leave, experiencing first-hand how to become a financial planner.

Incorporated in my day are training sessions, one-on-one tutoring, and reading current guides on IRA's, annuities, mutual funds, and stocks. I’m also gathering materials and creating additional notes for my classroom presentations as well as making connections to individuals in the business world. These connections provide guest speakers for my classes as well as shadowing/internship opportunities so that students taking these classes will be able to visit a business environment to determine if this is something they want to study in college.

Student Program
Students are given $10,000 to create an investment portfolio at the beginning of the course. Throughout the classes, they learn research tools on the Internet. At the beginning of each class, they read a current financial article and complete a ten bullet point summary due before they leave. They play the local newspaper stock market competition, and work with me during lectures to present notes, often reinforced with classroom speakers and media presentations. The Credit Union Association, in cooperation with our local credit union, has provided me with a book for each student which becomes the skeleton of topics covered. We also participate in a budget contest, requiring each student to log their savings for the semester. A $50 prize is awarded to the student who can save the most money and verify it with me. I rarely have a student walk into class late. More often they are anxious to get right into their portfolios to update their current value and to check on new companies discussed in class.

Student Benefits
Since revamping the business program at Liverpool High School four years ago, I take every opportunity I can take to increase my knowledge so I can maintain a current and relevant curriculum. It is necessary to make the courses interesting and aligned with global changes all around us. Students are becoming eager to understand the economic implications of world news, they are sharing investment strategies and talking about parent investment choices as well as taking control of their financial picture at an early age. As a teacher, my reward is seeing a student begin to save his or her money, learn how to use credit wisely before college, and respect the economic indicators in the news with an understanding that it affects each of them as well as their parents. One of my students from last year stopped me in the hall, excited to tell me that once he turned 18, he invested $500 in the market and had already made $200. He was so proud to tell me that he learned enough information from our class to feel confident to dive in and watch his money work for him. We also take the financial students to the New York Stock Exchange so they can experience Wall Street first hand.

Teacher Benefits
As a teacher for 23 years, I am excited to meet with my students and see their interest sparked into the financial world. I have so much to learn, but it certainly is not a chore. My lessons are constantly changing as I learn more in my efforts to be the best for my kids. There have been many of those "special moments" when I have a room of 25 teenagers silently listening to me, focused on my every word on how to learn life's lessons on how to use money wisely. This is why I am a teacher.

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