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United for Literacy - Ressources sur la littératie financière
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Educational Use
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"Trouvez des ressources téléchargeables pour les parents et les soignants, les organisateurs communautaires, les bénévoles et les apprenants. Les ressources comprennent des jeux et des activités pour soutenir la lecture, l'écriture, les sciences, les mathématiques, l'éducation financière et la numératie."

"United for Literacy est une organisation nationale à but non lucratif qui croit en la littératie comme un droit. United for Literacy estime que la littératie est transformationnelle, urgente, dynamique, vitale et réalisable. LA LITTÉRATIE CHANGE TOUT."

"Trouvez des ressources incroyables ICI pour :

la lecture
l'éducation financière
les troubles d'apprentissage
le soutien communautaire
la technologie
notre monde"

Subject:
Business
English Language Arts
Financial Literacy
Math
Social Studies
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Lesson
Provider:
United for Literacy
Author:
United for Literacy
Date Added:
12/12/2023
University of Guelph - Foundations in Agricultural Management - FREE Course
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"Are you ready to take your agricultural business to the next level? Then you're in the right place! In this course, you'll explore agricultural business strategy and planning, farm management, succession planning and financial fundamentals. Invest a few hours in this free, online course1 and you'll gain the knowledge and confidence to make a lifetime of better informed decisions for yourself and your business. Invest in your business. Invest in yourself."

Complete 8 Modules.

Subject:
Agribusiness
Agriculture Studies
Agriculture, Food Sustainability & Security
Business
Financial Literacy
Material Type:
Lesson
Module
Unit of Study
Author:
RBC
University of Guelph
Date Added:
11/10/2023
Vault - Understanding Money (Grade Alike Planning GAP Focus)
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Vault: Understanding Money is a digital education program that teaches students how to make wise financial decisions and improve their social emotional skills like goal-setting and responsible decision making. The interactive lessons will engage learners in an immersive adventure that translates financial concepts into easy to apply experiences that help students develop strategies for managing future finances.

Duration: 1.5-2 hours
Grade: 4, 5, 6
Topic : Academic Readiness, Financial Literacy
Languages: English - US, French - CA, Spanish - US, English - GB, English - CA

Sun West School Division: Log in through your clever account.

Subject:
21st Century Competencies
Business
Career & Work Exploration
Education
Elementary Education
Financial Literacy
Practical & Applied Arts
Social Studies
Material Type:
Unit of Study
Provider:
Everfi
Author:
EVERFI
Date Added:
04/21/2023
Venture - Entrepreneurial Expedition from Everfi
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NFTE Venture – Entrepreneurial Expedition™ is designed to teach students to think entrepreneurially about business and life.

Using case studies, interactive business simulations and personal development activities, this course teaches important basic business skills.

Students develop a personalized plan for their individual business, including finance, marketing, team-building and market research, along with a roadmap for academic and career success.

This Course Covers:
Budgeting and Building Startup Capital
Generating Business Ideas
Market Research
Growing a Business
Finances: The Cost of Doing Business
Marketing: Promoting your Business
Creating your Business Pitch

Subject:
Business
Economics
Education
Educational Technology
Entrepreneurship
Math
Social Studies
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Assessment
Homework/Assignment
Simulation
Provider:
Everfi
Author:
Everfi
Date Added:
09/07/2018
Video: Asset Liquidity (How Easy Selling/Liquidating Is) Explained in One Minute
Unrestricted Use
Public Domain
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Most people worry exclusively about aspects such as potential returns and fail to take asset liquidity into consideration when deciding whether or not to invest in certain assets.

Through this video, I did my best to explain what the liquidity of an asset means and why it's important to think about how you're going to sell before deciding whether or not to buy :)

I've also analyzed the liquidity of various asset classes: the liquidity of stocks, the liquidity of bonds, the liquidity of real estate, the liquidity of art and antiques, the liquidity of cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin as well as the liquidity of domains and websites.

Subject:
Business
Financial Literacy
Material Type:
Lesson
Author:
One Minute Economics
Date Added:
06/28/2024
Video: FUNNY MONEY - Long Term Wealth
Unrestricted Use
Public Domain
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Educational animation about credit card debt - part of a series about basic money management for students. These clips were made to complement talks given by comedian James Cunningham. (The character in the cartoon is indeed a real guy)

Subject:
Business
Financial Literacy
Material Type:
Lesson
Author:
Funny Money
Jeff Cunningham
Date Added:
06/28/2024
Video: How to Calculate Your Net Worth
Unrestricted Use
Public Domain
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One of the basic calculations that you should be able to do is figuring out your Net Worth. Once you can do that, you can start to monitor it over time to help see how well you are managing your finances.

Subject:
Business
Financial Literacy
Material Type:
Lesson
Author:
Preet Banerjee
Date Added:
06/28/2024
Video Interviews with Elders – Financial Empowerment
Unrestricted Use
Public Domain
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In order to incorporate Indigenous world views and perspectives into this textbook, eight Elders from FNUniv were interviewed during 2017 and 2018. For quick identification and access, the full set of interviews with Elders is listed below, along with a brief explanation of the focus of each interview.

Subject:
Business
Financial Literacy
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Lesson
Author:
University of Regina
Bettina Schneider
Date Added:
06/04/2024
Video: Investing During Inflation
Unrestricted Use
Public Domain
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Understand why it’s important to keep investing, even during market downturns and periods of inflation. In this video, we discuss things to consider when markets fall, things to consider before you sell your investments, the benefits of sticking to your financial plan. Maintaining investment and earnings growth is the best way to keep up with inflation. Your money earned (which grows from investing and wage increases) should be greater than or equal to the money spent (which increases through inflation).

Subject:
Business
Financial Literacy
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Author:
GetSmarterAboutMoney
Date Added:
03/05/2024
Video: Negative Equity Explained
Unrestricted Use
Public Domain
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When the value of an asset falls below the outstanding balance on the loan used to purchase that asset. Negative equity is calculated simply by taking the value of the asset less the balance on the outstanding loan.

Subject:
Business
Financial Literacy
Material Type:
Lesson
Author:
Christopher Tyson
Date Added:
06/28/2024
Video: Stock Market Explained
Unrestricted Use
Public Domain
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This video explains the history of the stock markets and how they work. Essentially, the stock market is people buying and selling companies based on how much they think those pieces will be worth in the future. The New York Stock Exchange is the top ranking stock exchange that has a physical location and millions of dollars are made and lost everyday with people trading stocks

Subject:
Business
Financial Literacy
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Author:
Netflix
Date Added:
09/19/2024
Video: What is Equity?
Unrestricted Use
Public Domain
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What is Equity? Equity is a term used in accounting, in real estate and home-ownership, in investing, as well as in startup financing and valuation. The meaning of the term equity is very similar in the various areas where it is used, so it will be good to review all four of these to get the best understanding.

In accounting, equity is a term that you will find on the balance sheet. What you own is on the left: assets. What you owe is on the right: liabilities and equity. Equity is the book value of the shareholder capital. The accounting equation tells you that assets equal liabilities plus equity. That also means that equity equals assets minus liabilities.

Equity on a balance sheet goes up when a company is profitable: the net income for the year gets added to equity through retained earnings. Equity on a balance sheet goes down when the company is loss-making (losses “eat up” the equity), or when the company pays a dividend to its shareholders.

Equity in home-ownership works very similar to equity on the balance sheet. What we own is on the left: the house worth $500.000. What we owe is on the right: $400.000 of mortgage loan from the bank, and the owner of the house, Jim, has $100.000 of equity in the house. Equity in home-ownership is what a home is worth minus how much you owe to the bank.

Just like equity on the balance sheet of a company can go up or down, the equity that you have in your home can go up or down. If Jim is paying down the mortgage on his house by $50.000, then the amount of the loan outstanding will decrease and his equity in the house will increase. If the market value of the house increases, then Jim’s equity in the house will increase. Remember that equity is what a home is worth minus how much you owe to the bank. If the market value of the house decreases, then Jim’s equity in the house will decrease, or even become negative. Jim will need to have a conversation with the bank to make a remediation plan to get back to positive equity, or in the worst case scenario Jim might lose the ownership of the house and the bank will need to take a partial write-off of its outstanding loan.

Investing in #equity. Remember the example of the small manufacturing business that owned a machine, had a loan from a bank, and equity from one shareholder. What if we make that a big manufacturing business that owns lots of machines at different sites totaling $1 billion, has many loans outstanding totaling $800 million that are publicly traded in the bond market, and has many different shareholders as the certificates of ownership, the equity, is traded publicly as well. As an investor, you have the choice of buying bonds (which would have a predetermined interest rate, and has the machines as collateral), or the choice of buying stocks (which are perceived as having more downside risk as well as more upside potential). Invest in debt, or invest in equity.

Want to track the total return on your stock portfolio (share price increase/decrease plus dividends received), then check out the easy-to-use online portfolio tracker called Sharesight: https://www.sharesight.com/thefinance...

Equity in a startup company. How do you put a “price” on what is essentially so far just an idea, that still has to be developed and will find many ups and downs along the way? The company does not have any assets, liabilities and equity yet. The financing and valuation depend on the estimate of the revenue, profit and cash flow that the business idea might bring in the future. A good way to learn about startup companies in the tech field is the comedy series “Silicon Valley”. What happens if the app you are developing turns out to have a great compression algorithm, you are courted by investors ready to fund you, and your friends and roommates suddenly become your employees while you become the CEO?

Having equity can be a great thing. Equity has potential risks as well as potential rewards. The term equity is used in accounting, in home-ownership, in investing, and in start-up financing and valuation. Probably the easiest metaphor to remember is equity in home-ownership: what a home is worth minus how much you owe to the bank.

Subject:
Business
Financial Literacy
Material Type:
Lesson
Author:
The Finance Storyteller
Philip de Vroe
Date Added:
06/28/2024
Video: What is liquidity?
Unrestricted Use
Public Domain
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Discover what liquidity is, how it differs across various asset types and what you, as a trader, may deduce from this measure. Compare two different areas of liquidity – a liquid market and a liquid asset. In the absence of a specific liquidity formula, consider the two ratios that will help you assess liquidity

Subject:
Business
Financial Literacy
Material Type:
Lesson
Author:
Capital.com
Date Added:
06/28/2024
The Virtual Production of The Mandalorian Season One
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A behind the scenes look at the groundbreaking virtual production technology used on The Mandalorian, Season One. Over 50 percent of The Mandalorian Season 1

Over 50 percent of The Mandalorian Season 1 was filmed using this ground-breaking new methodology, eliminating the need for location shoots entirely. Instead, actors in The Mandalorian performed in an immersive and massive 20’ high by 270-degree semicircular LED video wall and ceiling with a 75’-diameter performance space, where the practical set pieces were combined with digital extensions on the screens. Digital 3D environments created by ILM played back interactively on the LED walls, edited in real-time during the shoot, which allowed for pixel-accurate tracking and perspective-correct 3D imagery rendered at high resolution via systems powered by NVIDIA GPUs. The environments were lit and rendered from the perspective of the camera to provide parallax in real-time, as if the camera were really capturing the physical environment with accurate interactive light on the actors and practical sets, giving showrunner Jon Favreau, executive producer and director Dave Filoni, visual effects supervisor Richard Bluff, and cinematographers Greig Fraser and Barry Baz Idoine, and the episodic directors the ability to make concrete creative choices for visual effects-driven work during photography and achieve real-time in-camera composites on set.

The technology and workflow required to make in-camera compositing and effects practical for on-set use combined the ingenuity of partners such as Golem Creations, Fuse, Lux Machina, Profile Studios, and ARRI together with ILM’s StageCraft virtual production filmmaking platform and ultimately the real-time interactivity of the Unreal Engine platform.

Subject:
Arts Education
Business
Communication Media
Theatre Arts
Material Type:
Open Access Asset
Author:
Industrial Light and Magic
Date Added:
01/24/2024
Website: Career planning
Unrestricted Use
Public Domain
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Students can to understand their strengths and skills through these career quizzes. There are six quizzes and tests are available on Job Bank to help discover professional interests, abilities and preferences. The results will help find occupations that would be a good fit. Introspection should be the starting point in the career planning journey. Being aware of your strengths and weaknesses is key to defining career goals. Completing a self-assessment can help identify what you can already bring to the table, and what you need to work on to get a specific job or enter a particular field or industry.

Subject:
Business
Career & Work Exploration
Financial Literacy
Practical & Applied Arts
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Author:
Government of Canada
Date Added:
10/02/2024