Talk to your children
• Tell your children money is limited, things are becoming more expensive and choices must be made.
• Start with manageable choices: This is how much money we can spend for your birthday, what would you choose in this range?
• Help preschoolers learn more and less at the grocery store. These green beans cost 69 cents, those cost 50 cents. Which one is less? Which one should we buy?
• Brainstorm with teenagers about ways to keep them in their activities. Could they do more fundraisers? Pick up a paper route? Call on grandparents to help? Get rid of cable TV?
• Calm and empower frightened older children with openness. Use Monopoly money to demonstrate income, and real bills to show there's some money left over just not a lot of income for expensive activities.
• Brainstorm family activities that cost little but are nonetheless fun: picnics, going to the park, hiking, bike rides, $1 DVD rentals and popcorn, making cookies.
Sources: Julie Felshaw, Utah State Office of Education; Cheryl Wright, University of Utah; Kaelin Olsen, Utah State University



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