Society-Ready Graduates
Credit Management for College Students
Impact Nugget
Students participating in Credit Wise Cats activities reported a 33
percent increase in knowledge of credit and debt management; 82 percent
plan to control spending and 88 percent intend to reduce their debt.
Credit-Wise Cats was able to influence a large audience and provide
a great deal of information to a very vulnerable group: 6000 students
were directly reached in 2003-2004 through informational workshops,
one-on-one conferences, the Money Talks Speaker Series, and a Consumer
Issues course.
Issue
According to the July, 2002 Nellie Mae study, Undergraduate Students
and Credit Cards: An Analysis of Usage Rates and Trends, 83 percent
of undergraduates attending four- year institutions possess at least
one credit card. Credit card companies frequently market their products
to students and credit is readily available to students at the University
of Arizona, resulting in a rise in personal debt. Undergraduates in
the 2000 Nellie Mae analysis carried an average credit card balance
of $2,748, up from an average of $1,879 in the 1998 study. According
to the 2002-2003 Student Financial Aid Report, published by the Arizona
Board of Regents, 45 percent of all undergraduates graduate with student
loan debt and the average debt is $16,943. Little is done to provide
students with personal financial education to ensure that the students
have the basic money management skills necessary to manage their debt
and credit wisely.
What has been done?
It is obvious that student loan debt and credit problems for college
students are a serious problem that will only get worse. To provide
assistance to those already in trouble and to prevent others from following
in the same path, the Take Charge America Institute for Consumer Financial
Education and Research (TCAI) was established in the School of Family
and Consumer Sciences in 2003 with a $10 million endowment from Take
Charge America in Phoenix, AZ. The mission of TCAI is to bring financial
information to students and families in Arizona and across the nation.
To support student outreach TCAI funds the Credit-Wise Cats program
as part of the Students in Free Enterprise (SIFE) Team. Credit-Wise
Cats (named after the University of Arizona Wildcats) was created to
provide financial education to University of Arizona students and faculty.
This project was started through the SIFE Team and today includes workshops,
one-on-one counseling, a national personal finance case study competition
and the development of a general education personal finance class at
the university. Three main components include:
Credit-Wise Cats Educational Workshops
In the 2003- 2004 school year, the Credit-Wise Cats program goal was
to educate students on the wise use of credit as well as overall good
budgeting and money management skills. This task was accomplished by
providing faculty and students the opportunity to attend informational
workshops on money management and credit cards. A core of ten students
were trained as the Credit-Wise Cats and they presented their workshops
to classes, clubs and through residence life. Through the course of
the school year Credit-Wise Cats met with more than 500 students through
workshops and one-on-one counseling sessions.
Duel in the Desert national case study competition
This sponsored project, funded by Take Charge America, a debt management
agency in Phoenix AZ, consisted of nine regional personal finance case
study competitions held at Boston College, College of William and Mary,
Marshall University, Purdue University, University of South Carolina,
Texas A&M, and Colorado State University at Fort Collins and Metro
State University. The winning school and the host school from these
regional competitions were invited to compete in the national Duel in
the Desert competition held in Tucson, Arizona in March 2005. Eighteen
schools were invited and competed by solving a complex personal finance
case study involving a family in Tucson facing serious financial issues.
The teams were given 36 hours to develop their solution and then had
20 minutes to present their solution to a panel of judges.
Personal Finance General Education Course
In the Fall 2004 a “Money, Consumers and Society” course
was offered for the first time as part of the general education curriculum.
Impact
Students participating in Credit Wise Cats activities reported a 33
percent increase in knowledge of credit and debt management; 82 percent
plan to control spending and 88 percent intend to reduce their debt.
Credit-Wise Cats was able to influence a large audience and provide
a great deal of information to a very vulnerable group: 6000 students
were directly reached in 2003-2004 through informational workshops,
one-on-one conferences, the Money Talks Speaker Series, and a Consumer
Issues course. Credit Wise Cats was also very successful through the
media. The program was featured in 5 articles in major local and statewide
newspapers in 2004 with a population reach of over 350,000.
“This program has helped me better understand the choices I have
with my spending.”
“I never realized the importance of a credit report before I
attended one of these sessions. I am going to order my report as soon
as I get home!”
“I have been one of the counselors for three years and I have
learned so much about my own habits. It has been very valuable.”
Funding
Take Charge America in Phoenix, Arizona
Contact
Jing Xiao, Director
TCA Institute for Consumer Financial Education and Research
Division of Retailing and Consumer Sciences
John and Doris Norton School of Family and Consumer Sciences
The University of Arizona
PO Box 210033
Tucson, AZ 85721-0033 Tel: (520) 621-1295 FAX 3209
Email:xiao@ag.arizona.edu
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