The teen money manual A guide to cash, credit, spending, saving, work, wealth, and more

Kara McGuire

Book - 2015

Provides a comprehensive guide for teenagers to saving, spending, and earning money, and includes information on starting a business, preparing for interviews, opening a bank account, and purchasing car and property insurance.

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332.024/McGuire
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 332.024/McGuire Due Nov 4, 2023
Subjects
Published
North Mankato, Minnesota : Capstone Young Readers 2015.
Language
English
Main Author
Kara McGuire (-)
Physical Description
208 pages : color illustrations ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781623701352
  • Earning
  • Let's Make Some Money!
  • Chapter 1. Jobs and Career Planning
  • Chapter 2. Being Your Own Boss
  • Chapter 3. Wages and Taxes
  • Saving
  • Make It a Habit
  • Chapter 4. Savvy Saving
  • Chapter 5. Taking It to the Bank
  • Chapter 6. Investing Basics
  • Spending
  • What Should I Buy?
  • Chapter 7. Spending Smart
  • Chapter 8. Brilliant Borrowing
  • Chapter 9. Paying for College
  • Protecting
  • Protect Yourself!
  • Chapter 10. The Basics: Risk and Insurance
  • Chapter 11. Protecting Your Stuff
  • Chapter 12. Protecting Yourself
  • Glossary
  • Select Bibliography & Source Notes
  • Index
  • Additional Resources
Review by Booklist Review

This accessible guide covers traditional aspects of personal finance in an engaging, breezy manner, packing a tremendous amount of useful information into brief chapters set off by illustrations, charts, graphs, and checklists. Aimed primarily at college-bound teens, the content covers money-management basics: job hunting, entrepreneurship, saving and investing, spending and borrowing, paying for college, and asset protection (insurance and guarding against identity theft). Throughout, readers receive solid advice: stay in school, consider unpaid internships and volunteer work, plan, budget, and start saving now. Realistic case scenarios provide additional tips. The information is up-to-date and reflects current realities, with references to our present economy, in which people hold down multiple part-time jobs. Also included are helpful sites; apps (e.g., mint.org, Piggy Mojo); and social-media initiatives, including peer-to-peer lending and crowd-funding ventures. This practical manual will supplement standard textbooks and complement other popular guides, such as Tamsen Butler's The Complete Guide to Personal Finance for Teenagers and College Students (2010). Consider this for browsers, researchers, and aspiring tycoons alike.--McBroom, Kathleen Copyright 2014 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 6 Up-This solid book explains the choices teens can make now that will impact their future credit and financial life. It is well organized into four sections: earning, saving, spending, and protecting. Each one has three chapters that offer informative options and practical advice. The section on earning covers making money, from getting a job and becoming an entrepreneur to deciphering one's paycheck. The part about saving discusses options, investing, time horizon, risk, and diversification. Spending discusses budgeting, expenses, borrowing, credit cards, paying for college, figuring costs of college, and tools for financial aid. Protecting your property looks at different types of insurance, as well as how to protect against identity theft and what readers should do if they think their identity has been stolen. Up-to-date tips and resources include statistics, worksheets, sample documents, websites, and apps. Side bars share financial experiences of young entrepreneurs, investors, and others. The book is similar in scope to Tamara Orr's Money Matters (Mitchell Lane, 2010), which covers economy, budgeting, savings, earning money, and stock-market investing tips. This handy manual teaches teens about financial literacy in a helpful, casual tone. Clear and accessible explanations will help readers to build a "rock solid financial future."-June Shimonishi, Torrance Public Library, CA (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Just about anything teens would want to know about money and finance but didnt know enough to ask.McGuire first makes the often intimidating world of financenot generally a topic on a teens must-read listapproachable by separating the book into four tidy subsections: Earning, Saving, Spending and Protecting. She makes it further accessible by using concrete examples instead of abstractions. She discusses the ins and outs of starting a business, with two entrepreneurial teens describing how they acquired their startup capital and how they juggled their businesses with their school schedules. Oftentimes, McGuire departs from giving purely financial advice and provides counsel that sounds like it comes from a mentor or parent. Your number one job as a teen is to get good grades, gain experiences from school and community activities, and prepare for higher education. She advises teens on appropriate dress for an interviewWhen in doubt, dress up, not downand how to discriminate between wants and needs. She also covers banking and investing, saving for the near and far future, and purchasing car and property insurance. There are scads of helpful websites, as well as a sample resume, budget and W-2 form. Colorful photos and charts and eye-catching graphics keep the pages turning.A solid, thoroughly readable guide. (Nonfiction. 12-18) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.