Content Partner
Evaluating Credit Card Offers
Objective
Students will be able to:
- Evaluate credit card offers by describing differences among credit cards rates and fees.
- Recommend how to choose the best credit terms that best fit your needs.
Standard
Standard: 4
- Students will understand that: People can choose to invest some of their money in financial assets to achieve long-term financial goals, such as buying a house, funding future education, or securing retirement income. Investors receive a return on their investment in the form of income and/or growth in value of their investment over time. People can more easily achieve their financial goals by investing steadily over many years, reinvesting dividends, and capital gains to compound their returns. Investors have many choices of investments that differ in expected rates of return and risk. Riskier investments tend to earn higher long-run rates of return than lower-risk investments. Investors select investments that are consistent with their risk tolerance, and they diversify across a number of different investment choices to reduce investment risk.
Resources
Mint Curriculum Resources
ReadyAssessments
Assign your students the Evaluating Credit Card Offers Quiz using ReadyAssessments, a free assessment tool.
Procedure
Prior to introducing students to Mint, we recommend you read through the Curriculum Overview (Section 1) to get acquainted with each activity and review pages 3 to 5 in Curriculum Orientation (section 2) to help you and your students log-in to Mint. Here is the link for your students to log in (https://education.intuit.com/register).
Show students Intro and Logging in to Intuit for Education Video to orient them with the log-in process if needed.
The Mint simulation is a hands on activity that lets students analyze and create a budget. Provide students with a digital copy or print copy of Evaluating Credit Card Offers Activity. Use Evaluating Credit Card Offers Answer Key as a teacher guide.
Disclaimer
For students to be able to access Mint successfully, they must use the same computer or device every time they access Mint. Otherwise, they will be forced to re-create a new account. Paid advertisements appear in Intuit Mint. The Council for Economic Education does not endorse or evaluate the advertised product, service, or company, nor any of the claims made by the advertisement.
FFFL Connection
Evaluating Credit Card Offers has been created as a real-world, hands-on technology simulation to accompany FFFL 9-12, 3rd Edition lesson 15 called Shopping for a Credit Card. If you have not taught this lesson plan, we recommend students are proficient in the credit concepts.
In this personal finance activity, students will use Mint, a real-world personal finance app, to follow Isaiah throughout the year and learn about different types of credit card offers.