
Finance
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 view | Money Matters for Kids Earn it, give it, spend it, save it-I wish I'd taught my children more about managing money, and taught it earlier. We deal with money daily in our lives and it can cause so many problems too! This finance book for children will give our children a look at money management from God's viewpoint. Fun, puzzles, jokes, Bible memory verses, and stories teach children to pay their offerings, to pay debts on time, to use their spending money wisely, and to treat their use of money as a stewardship. Paperback, illustrated, 63 pages by Larry Burkett.
| #02743RG
 view | The Kids' Business Book Get excited about making money through your own business! Meet kids who began their businesses between the ages of 7-12 in this book, and learn simple methods of starting a business, including tips on accounting and advertising. Paperback, 64 pages, lots of pictures throughout!
| #02329RG
 view | Presto Change-O 17% OffI am sure that I am not the only one who has experienced having a teenage clerk stumble through trying to count back change. This is a needed skill, and one that children don't just absorb from daily dealings. This game was my daughter's favorite, but as I played it with her, I realized there is far more here than I bargained for. Presto Change-O will teach your children how to make change, how to count change back, how to be comfortable using the right coins and bills while making purchases, and how to figure out if they are given the right change back. Rather than just being a "luck" game, children get ahead by being able to handle their money well and make change accurately. Includes full-color playing board, play cash and coins, dice, and playing pieces. If you have an ample supply, using real money would make it even more educational. This is a fun, ingenious, educational game that I highly recommend! Ages 6 and up.
| #01109RG
 view | Buy it Right Shopping Game Roll the dice and name your price! Shop for everything from skateboards to ice cream cones. Take turns purchasing, adding up prices, and making change. The first player to fill his shopping cart wins. Kids roll three dice and determine how much they will spend or earn by the way they read the dice. If I throw a 2, 5, and 9, and if I am buying, I'll want to call that $2.59, the lowest possible price. But, if I am selling, I want to call it $9.52. This calls for some strategy skills. Unlike a lot of shopping games directed to girls in malls, this is a gender-free game where the accent is on the math. Includes game board, coins, bills, calculator, and lots of shopping fun. 1 "AA" battery required for calculator. 3 skill levels, 2 to 4 players, ages 5 to 9+.
| #10762RG
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