T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1048.1 | shorten the time spans? | MSBCS::MIDTTUN | Lisa,223-1714,PKO2-1,M/S J30 | Tue Nov 14 1995 14:22 | 7 |
| Interesting concept...the only issue I have w/ it for a young child is
that the time slots are too long for their comprehension. I'd scale
that back somewhat (remember when the time between birthday's seemed
like forever?). I think the disciplined approach is helpful, but the
kids have to see the rewards early enough and often enough to make it
real to them. No reason why you can't re-create the timeslots when they
are older....
|
1048.2 | | PERFOM::WIBECAN | Acquire a choir | Tue Nov 14 1995 16:47 | 17 |
| Interesting ideas. However, what we find is the biggest problem is the
spending, rather than the saving. Leah has been getting allowance for several
years, and has spent her own money once. She's expressed the desire to buy
certain things for herself, but that hasn't really happened. With no spending
goals at all, it's hard to discuss balancing short-term and long-term goals.
What do other people do about this kind of thing?
(I suppose we're as guilty as she is; we have no specific saving/spending goals
other than socking away money for the "future." It's hard to teach how to do
something we don't really do ourselves.)
Regarding the record-keeping: we've been discussing keeping track of Leah's
allowance on the computer, and perhaps giving her a "virtual" allowance that
she can draw on. That way, it would stay in the bank, earning interest, and we
wouldn't have this load of cash sitting in the house.
Brian
|
1048.3 | | DPE1::ARMSTRONG | | Tue Nov 14 1995 16:56 | 18 |
| We have 4 kids with VERY different ideas about savings.
Our youngest daughter Anna (now 5) saw a stuffed animal in a
toy store that she DESPERATELY wanted. We looked at the price
and when we got home she counted out her money and she needed
to save for a while longer before she could buy it. She's
a GREAT saver (what does she have to spend money on?) so after
a couple of months she had saved up her allowances enough to
buy the animal. We all went off to the store and she bought it.
On the way home I commented that now she would have no money
at all in her piggy bank and asked how she felt about that.
She said it was okay, since her new animal was more important
than money.
After short pause her older sister Molly who's now 7 piped up
'Anna, NOTHING is more important than money'.
|
1048.4 | another approach | COOKIE::MUNNS | dave | Wed Nov 15 1995 11:50 | 14 |
| We have been using a different approach to money. We practice the
belief that relationships with friends are the main emphasis in life.
Money is not important.
All those TV toy commercials that bombard our kids can be very
influential. When my 5 year old son shops for a birthday present for
a friend, he is not interested in anything for himself. He seems to
be quite satisfied with what he has and who he is. Same for his parents.
Same for my dad (not my shop-a-holic/work-a-holic mom).
He is learning the value of money by our discussions on the price of
things (homes, cars, bicycles, various toys). He has a bank account
and likes the idea that his money is growing. I am curious to see
if he will stay in this mode or be influenced by the spend-a-holics.
|
1048.5 | earnings | STOWOA::SPERA | | Thu Nov 16 1995 11:42 | 14 |
| Interesting...
My 4 1/2 year old is learning to make choices. When shopping for a
birthday present for a friend, she decided she wanted a doll for
herself. I agreed she could have it if she had enough money in her
penny jar...she did. However, back at the store, she changed her mind
and bought a video instead. Now, recently, she's been complaining about
her choice and trying to switch back to the doll. There is not enough
money in the penny jar adn she is having too much trouble deciding on
what she'll ask Santa to get her so this is all getting complicated.
One problem I have is hte idea of allowance. The penny jar is mom's
spare change. She isn't earning money. How do you save what you don't
earn ?
|
1048.6 | | CSC32::P_SO | Get those shoes off your head! | Thu Nov 16 1995 11:52 | 24 |
|
...chores.
My son has jobs that he is expected to do around the house and
there are others that are his chores. If he does his chores...
ALL of them, he receives an allowance of 8 dollars a week.
Two dollars of this is his to spend as he wishes (he usually ends
up saving it), the other 6 dollars is divided between 3 jars,
short term savings, long term savings, and tax. The tax
money is used for spending money on vacations or for Christmas
presents, etc..
I think this is teaching him that some things are required of us
in life and that we are not always compensated for those things
and others that provide a valuable service to others (such as
helping Mom around the house) is something that you may be
compensated for. Also, he has gotten very good at figuring
out what toys are junk and will break shortly after they are
purchased and what is quality. And he thinks long and hard
before he takes any money out of his short term savings.
As of yet he has not touched the long term or taxes.
Pam
|
1048.7 | | MPGS::WOOLNER | Your dinner is in the supermarket | Thu Nov 16 1995 12:00 | 22 |
| IMO age 4 is a little young to have an official "allowance", but you
can still save what few coins of the realm *do* come your way. When
Alex was that age she got all my pennies; every night (or whenever I
got around to cleaning out the change purse) the pennies would go
direct from my wallet to her pickle jar in her room. What was a big
deal to her was trading coins up for bigger denominations, which is not
a bad math lesson!
She also got (still gets) all the redemption money for cans and
bottles. Then there's birthday money and other windfall items
(sometimes I buy a scratch ticket and let her keep the winnings; she
got $5 once that way).
We have pretty much always had the rule that 50% of her income goes to
savings (a tin box, the contents of which gets deposited about once per
quarter) and the rest is discretionary (but subject to parental veto,
of course!).
Then you get into the religious war over whether an allowance is earned
(by chores performed around the house) or given as a right :-)
Leslie
|
1048.8 | | USCTR1::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Thu Nov 16 1995 13:14 | 13 |
| RE .6 How old is your son?
My older son, Ryan, is 7, and has been receiving 50 cents a week since
he turned 6. He is expected to be helpful when asked, and has certain
chores as well. He sometimes gets $1 from an aunt as a treat, but
usually has just his allowance to spend from. I have been amazed that
he can plan for things he wants - he was able to save (with b-day $
too) up $25 of the $30 it cost to buy roller blades, which he really
wanted. He also occasionally buys hmself a book from the school book
order, especially when it goes over the book limit that I've already
paid for.
|
1048.9 | | CSC32::P_SO | Get those shoes off your head! | Thu Nov 16 1995 15:38 | 9 |
|
re. -1
My son is 8 years old. He gets a weekly allowance equal to his age.
Eight dollars may seem like a lot but his long term savings is being
saved for college so it is pretty painless and will be a great reward
in the end.
Pam
|
1048.10 | What do the kids pay for? | PERFOM::WIBECAN | Harpoon a tomata | Thu Nov 16 1995 16:48 | 16 |
| For all you parents whose kids actually spend some of their allowance, what do
they spend it on? As I mentioned in an earlier note, my daughter spends
essentially nothing, and I'm curious if part of the reason for the difference
is that we're paying for things that other kids might pay for themselves. (No
value judgement intended, I'm just curious.)
For example, how do you handle:
Birthday presents for other kids?
School lunch?
School book club orders?
Magazine subscriptions?
Museum gift shop purchases?
???
Brian
|
1048.11 | Spending allowance | ABACUS::JANEB | See it happen => Make it happen | Fri Nov 17 1995 07:59 | 21 |
| Our girls (age 8 and 10) get a dollar a week. They can spend it on
anything they want except candy. They usually spend it when we go on
an outing together, on impulse items. Sometimes they save for
something big, usually with a Barbie theme, but they often lose
interest if the goal is too big.
Over the last few years I've seen them understand the balance between
spending and saving, but it took a while. One daughter was spending it
as fast as she got it, the other was saving it all. Now they think it
out and you can see the little wheels spinning in their heads.
Kathleen (8) was obsessed with a $40 (!) set of Barbies for a few
months. She put every reference to money in terms of what it would
take her to get that. She paid attention to what gas, dinner,
everything cost. It was an eye-opener for her. She eventually lost
interest, but I think she has a new feeling for what things cost.
They also use allowance for items at the school store, those ripoff
machines in the exitway of the grocery store, and comic books. We pay
for birthday presents for friends, but they have to choose within a
budget at the store. That also took a while to sink in.
|
1048.12 | | WRKSYS::MACKAY_E | | Fri Nov 17 1995 09:27 | 17 |
|
My daughter, 10, get $1 a day for allowance. She has to deposit
50% of it in the bank. She is free to spend the rest of it,
with our approval. She also gets $ from my parents for her
birthday and that goes in bank with no exception. We take care
of all the necessary expenses, including birthday presents,
books and magazines (National Geographic World and 3-2-1 Contact),
lunch and snack $. She does not have to spend her allowance at all.
So far, she spends her money for non-essential items like souvenirs
(like T shirt) when we go on vacations, animal posters for her room,
toys and snacks for her kitty (that is really amusing), dance school
sweatshirt, trophy for dance competition (each dancer only gets a
ribbon), etc. We try to teach her whether something is worth spending
money on.
Eva
|
1048.13 | | WRKSYS::MACKAY_E | | Fri Nov 17 1995 09:30 | 7 |
|
Oh, I left out that she paid for 50% of her electic guitar.
Everytime we go to the bank, she gets excited about the interests
she earned! MOst of the time, she saves more than she spends.
Eva
|
1048.14 | Money Doesn't Grow On Trees | MROA::DUPUIS | | Fri Nov 17 1995 11:31 | 13 |
| Re: -Pam
Did you get your allowance ideas from "Money Doesn't Grow On Trees".
We follow that same procedure. It works well for us.
For the person who wanted to know what the kids spend their money
on...my daughters take weekly horseback riding lessons ($16/kid/lesson)
they each pay $1.00 toward their lessons. If we go to a flea market, yard
sale or shopping they can bring their money with them and spend it if
they wish. I pay for birthday presents and movies and things like
that.
Roberta
|
1048.15 | | CSC32::P_SO | Get those shoes off your head! | Fri Nov 17 1995 11:52 | 7 |
|
Roberta,
We don't have the book but when the author of "Money Doesn't
Grow on Trees" was on Oprah, we got the idea from her.
Pam
|
1048.16 | A mixed bag . . . | ICS::CROWTHER | Maxine 276-9199 | Fri Nov 24 1995 12:13 | 15 |
| We have a 13 year old and an 8 year old. They each get an allowance. When we
first started with each of them they got a small amount of allowance "free"
or not tied to chores. Each year we add to the amount and tie it to chores
they are expected to do. They also have the ability to earn money by doing
extra work (washing cars, windows etc.)
My 13 year old is now getting $10 a week and my 8 year old gets $5. This is
money for themselves. They are not required to by presents with it, though,
traditionally, they each buy some small Christmas presents for each other.
They can spend the money any way they wish, just like adults. The younger one
does more saving for larger things, the older has joined a book club and
makes his own purchases.
This seems to be working for us, your mileage may vary.
|
1048.17 | iou's | AIMTEC::STDBKR::Burden_d | Keep Cool with Coolidge | Thu May 16 1996 13:54 | 18 |
| Yesterday Anthony (7.5) showed us how much he keeps track of his money. A few
weeks ago we were short of cash in the house and needed a few dollars for
something. Anthony was the only person with some cash so we wrote him an IOU
for $7.
Today is Book Fair at his school, so yesterday, while getting his book bag
ready, he asked Diane to put a folded piece of paper in the bag. Diane opened
it up and it was the IOU we gave him! He was quite serious, he planned to use
this to buy books at the book fair... Diane didn't burst his bubble so put
the IOU in his bag.
Last night, after they went to bed, I went to Kroger and cashed a check so I
could cash in the IOU this morning befre he went to school. This evening we
will gently explain to him that IOUs are not real cash, but are only good
between the giver and givee. We were just surpised at his total faith in
being able to use the IOU as cash!
Dave
|