1st Edition
Holistic Financial Literacy Education Laying the Groundwork with Equitable Instructional Strategies
1. Financial literacy and wealth inequality: Supporting the achievement of better economic outcomes for women 2. Engaging with the Medicine Wheel: A New Path Toward Two-Eyed Seeing and Holistic Financial Literacy 3. For Whom Do People Work All Day? 4 Why Should We Educate Secondary School Students in Financial Citizenship Education? 5. The Missing Piece: Emotional Financial Literacy 6. Personal Worldview Conviction and Financial Behavior: Advancing Holistic Financial Education Through Personal Worldview Identification 7. Enhancing Holistic Well-Being through Financial Education: Integrating Sustainability and Social Responsibility 8. Cultivating Enduring Social Responsibility in Financial Literacy: A Perspective from Scotland 9. Examining the Cost of Fast Fashion: Cultivating Ethical Consumerism through an Inquiry-Based Transdisciplinary Approach 10. Latino Collectivism, Retirement Savings, and Holistic Financial Literacy 11. The Cost of Misogyny: Financial Literacy, Women, and Power
Biography
Thomas A. Lucey is Professor of Elementary Education in the School of Teaching and Learning at Illinois State University, USA.
"Holistic Financial Literacy Education provides unique values to the field of financial literacy education, which is contributed by scholars from diverse academic fields and geographic locations. It broadens the field by making connections between financial literacy and other important topics in social science such as gender equality, misogyny, sustainability, social responsibility, ethical consumerism, and meaning of work.
It enriches the literature of financial literacy by proposing innovative concepts such as emotional financial literacy, holistic financial education, holistic financial literacy, and financial citizen education. This text can be used for both undergraduate and graduate courses in multiple fields such as consumer science, personal finance, education, economics, business, marketing, finance, sociology, psychology, political science and related disciplines."
-- Jing Jian Xiao, Ph.D., Professor, Consumer Finance,
College of Health Sciences, University of Rhode Island, USA"This intriguing collection of essays provides the reader with an opportunity to reflect on a rich variety of holistic perspectives on money and finance. Indigenous, Marxist, feminist perspectives are combined in this book with the psychological, social, philosophical aspects of finance in its cultural contexts. Financial literacy education is the unifying theme. The committed educator will find many inspiring examples of ways to introduce younger students to money and finance not as instruments of individual material gain but as reflections of our core societal values with an emphasis on our ability to decide and shape those values through the priorities we attach to the money value of things."
-- Brenda Spotton Visano, PhD, University Professor, School of Public Policy & Administration, York University, Toronto, Canada






