
A complete set of financial mathematics and financial literacy resources for Year/Grade 7 to 10 — covering simple and compound interest, budgeting, percentages, loans, GST/sales tax, and saving and investing. Lesson plans, worksheets, slide decks, question banks and assessments are mapped to the Australian Curriculum v9.0 and US state standards, so teachers can plan a full unit in minutes and students leave with money skills they will actually use.
Aligned to your curriculum
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Differentiated for every student
Lesson plans, slide decks, printable worksheets, question banks and assessments — written by teachers, not generated as filler. Every resource pairs a clear teaching sequence with practical money scenarios students recognise: pay slips, savings accounts, loan repayments, sales tax, GST and budgeting a real weekly income.

Real teacher resources, not filler
Every lesson, worksheet and assessment maps to financial mathematics outcomes in the Australian Curriculum v9.0 and to consumer and personal financial literacy standards used across US state frameworks. Teachers can drop a sequence straight into their unit planner — interest, percentages, budgeting, loans, tax and superannuation/retirement accounts are all covered.
Each topic ships with three difficulty tiers so a Year/Grade 7 class new to percentages and a Year/Grade 10 class working on compound interest both get tasks pitched at the right level. Worked examples, scaffolded questions and extension problems sit side by side, so teachers can stretch the strong students and support the ones who need another pass.
- You in approximately four minutes
Foundations of money for Year/Grade 7 and 8
Compound interest, loans and saving for Year/Grade 9
Investing, superannuation and financial planning for Year/Grade 10
The early-secondary resources introduce the building blocks of personal financial literacy: percentages and percentage change, simple interest, GST and sales tax, reading a pay slip, and budgeting a weekly or fortnightly income. Each lesson pairs a short teaching sequence with worked examples, then moves students into a printable worksheet and a quick exit-ticket assessment so teachers can check understanding before moving on. The scenarios use real numbers students recognise — a phone plan, a casual shift, a household grocery budget — so the maths feels immediately useful rather than abstract.
The mid-secondary resources move students from simple to compound interest and into the financial decisions that shape adult life: comparing savings accounts, calculating loan repayments, understanding credit card interest, and evaluating buy-now-pay-later offers. Worksheets include both calculation practice and short decision-making tasks, so students learn to interpret a financial situation rather than just plug numbers into a formula. Assessments include short-response and extended-response items written in the style of standardised testing across both the Australian and US contexts.
The upper-secondary resources cover the topics that prepare students for senior-school mathematics and for life after school: annuities, superannuation and retirement accounts, depreciation, inflation, share-market basics, and longer-term financial planning. Lesson plans include project-style tasks — building a five-year savings plan, comparing two job offers on take-home pay, or modelling a small-business cash flow — paired with worksheets, slides and an end-of-unit assessment. The content scales naturally into Year 11 General/Standard Mathematics in Australia and into Algebra II and Personal Finance courses in the US.