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@article{1818776, author = {Ševčík, Karel}, article_location = {Brno}, article_number = {3}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.11118/lifele20211103243}, keywords = {educational standards; financial education; financial literacy; projected curriculum; quantitative content analysis.}, language = {eng}, issn = {1804-526X}, journal = {Lifelong Learning}, title = {Comparison of Financial Literacy Concept in Projected Curricula of Selected Countries}, url = {https://lifelonglearning.mendelu.cz/media/pdf/LLL_20211103243.pdf}, volume = {11}, year = {2021} }
TY - JOUR ID - 1818776 AU - Ševčík, Karel PY - 2021 TI - Comparison of Financial Literacy Concept in Projected Curricula of Selected Countries JF - Lifelong Learning VL - 11 IS - 3 SP - 243-272 EP - 243-272 PB - Mendelova univerzita v Brně SN - 1804526X KW - educational standards KW - financial education KW - financial literacy KW - projected curriculum KW - quantitative content analysis. UR - https://lifelonglearning.mendelu.cz/media/pdf/LLL_20211103243.pdf N2 - Due to the turbulent economic development in recent years and the rising number of financial issues individuals need to deal with, financial literacy is becoming a widely recognized concept, which, among others, spreads into the field of primary and secondary education. However, the different political, social or cultural environment has an impact on the final form of concept implementation in various countries. Therefore, the presented study focuses on the analysis and comparison of project curricula, which are crucial documents for financial education at the primary levels. Categorical system was presented as the main research tool, with the purpose to examine documents from the countries of USA (Utah), Canada (Ontario), the Czech Republic and Australia. The results suggested the relative disunity of the financial literacy concept within the Ontario curriculum, as no comprehensive content block is devoted to it during the study. The concept is presented only as one of the cross-curricular themes often lacking any continuity. Within the Utah curriculum, the individual actions should be cognitively more demanding so the students are properly stimulated to be active and solve the given task. The Czech curriculum then suffers from a lack of guidance in the curriculum concerning financial literacy. The cause might lay in the lower scope of the document. ER -
ŠEVČÍK, Karel. Comparison of Financial Literacy Concept in Projected Curricula of Selected Countries. \textit{Lifelong Learning}. Brno: Mendelova univerzita v Brně, 2021, roč.~11, č.~3, s.~243-272. ISSN~1804-526X. Dostupné z: https://dx.doi.org/10.11118/lifele20211103243.
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