• Get in Touch
  • Get in Touch with our Support!
  • Privacy Policy
Monday, January 30, 2023
OvaNewsBlast.com
  • Home
  • News
  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
OvaNewsBlast.com
No Result
View All Result

Pro athletes supporting financial literacy for kids and young adults — The Undefeated

March 3, 2021
in Sports
Reading Time: 8min read
A A
Pro athletes supporting financial literacy for kids and young adults — The Undefeated
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share ShareShareShareShareShare

The persistent racial wealth gap is pushing pro athletes to champion financial literacy for Black kids and teens. They are doing everything from going into schools and colleges to investing in and sponsoring financial literacy programs and apps.

NFL players such as New England Patriots linebacker Brandon Copeland and Houston Texans safety Michael Thomas and NBA players, including Harrison Barnes, Kevin Durant and Chris Paul, are among the leaders in this effort.

Copeland, or Professor Cope, as he is called by his students, teaches personal finance to students at his alma mater, the University of Pennsylvania, and has a financial literacy website, Life101.io. He also brings high school students to locations where he’s speaking to learn about personal finance.

“I literally have videos on my phone of three African American kids from Philly who had never heard about stocks before passionately debating about which stock was going to be better, Apple, Nike or Uber,” Copeland said. “Now, they’re on the bus, still having this conversation. Now they go home, and they’re still thinking about buying Nike stock, as opposed to buying Nike shoes. And so that is how we create a ripple effect.”

Stream Why Not Us: NC Central Men’s Basketball, only on ESPN+ Stream Now

Barnes, Paul, Durant and former New York Yankees All-Star pitcher CC Sabathia are among those who invested in Goalsetter, a financial literacy app for kids of all ages.

“Financial literacy is a personal passion,” said Barnes, “and it is an extremely important life skill that is necessary to teach our youth how to be smarter, not only with spending but with savings. Aimed at helping to close the wealth gap, through this partnership we are investing in Black futures by creating access to essential financial conversations at an early age, increasing the likelihood of achieving a college education and setting the next generation up for success.”

Added Paul, “This partnership is about learning from our history to create a strong future that prepares the next generation of Black and brown kids to be savers and investors. Financial education is a necessary and critical component of creating an equal America.”

The Goalsetter app uses quizzes, games, memes, hip-hop stars and social media influencers to teach kids about saving, investing and compound interest. Kids can open a savings account, make regular deposits and set savings goals for anything from buying a bicycle to college tuition. Parents can also participate and learn from the app.

The Goalsetter app uses quizzes, games, memes, hip-hop stars and social media influencers to teach kids about saving, investing and compound interest.

“A lot of athletes are investing,” said Tanya Van Court, Goalsetter founder and CEO. “They are money savvy and are role models for kids on and off the court. Their investment in Goalsetter means so much more than just a check. It is an investment in Black-owned business, an investment in the future financial education of Black kids and families and an investment in a more equal future. It means a lot.”

She said their investments also help debunk stereotypes about Black athletes mismanaging their money and going bankrupt. Van Court said we put a spotlight on athletes when they have financial problems, but the lack of financial knowledge is not endemic to one person, group or socioeconomic class.

“Ninety-five percent of wealthy families lose their wealth by third generation,” Van Court said. “That tells us we don’t teach kids about money. Forty percent of Americans can’t pull together $400 in case of emergency. And 70% of African Americans will have a kid that falls out of the middle class.”

Barnes announced on Twitter that he was starting Goalsetter savings accounts with $40 for each of 500 kids at Build Black in Sacramento, California, and Thomas L. Marsalis Elementary School in Dallas. “Black Americans are projected to have a negative net worth by 2053,” he said. “But we believe we can reverse course with a Goalsetter savings account for every kid in America.”

“Who’s got next?” he tweeted.

Kids who have savings accounts are 6x more likely to go to college. This #BlackHistoryMonth, @goalsetterco and I are on a mission to start 1 million savings accounts for Black and Brown kids. pic.twitter.com/L1KZ069OE7

— Harrison Barnes (@hbarnes) Feb. 2, 2021

Retired NBA player Greg Oden has also been lecturing to young players and high school students for years. His interest was piqued when he entered the NBA and was presented with investments that he never knew existed.

“I am not a professional financial person,” Oden said. “I do not have a degree in finance. But I am a guy who had a lot of money come at me at a young age. So, one of the things I tell them is to make sure you’re involved. When I was 18, 19, I didn’t do my due diligence. I just said, ‘Mom, you handle it. Financial advisers, you got it. You guys seem nice. I trust you. You go ahead. Yes, as long as I’m not losing money, I’m good.’

“When I was done playing, because I was so up and down in my career, I started looking at my finances a little bit more, and I saw I’m spending, I’m not getting any income,” Oden said. “That’s not a good feeling, especially knowing everything that we do about athletes going broke three to five years after they’re done playing filing for bankruptcy.

“I had to do something to change my life around and I’m doing that now,” he said. “So, to help some young people who probably are going to go through the same things I went through, and some of the things I’m going through now, I can talk about that.”

“I had to do something to change my life around and I’m doing that now. So, to help some young people who probably are going to go through the same things I went through, and some of the things I’m going through now, I can talk about that.” – Greg Oden

Brandon Miller, goalie for the Charlotte Independence in the USL Championship, is teaching high school kids through the Young Investors Society. “I was looking for ways to make a greater impact in my area, especially underserved communities,” he said. His goal was to keep the kids from making the same money mistakes he was making in his mid-20s.

“I was thinking of how we can change the trajectory for generations,” he said. “My goal is [to] impact lower-income communities and communities of color. How can we reach them and get them to grow their own money and grow the community wealth?”

Thomas, who was nominated for this year’s Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year award for championing social justice and financial literacy for kids, said he realized how little he knew about finance when he got his first rookie free-agent contract, even though he attended Stanford University.

“I was introduced to things like how to build credit, how to get a lease,” he said. “Well, I didn’t have a credit report. I didn’t have any working experience or know-how to how to balance my checkbook and to start saving. This was really important, especially in my unique situation where you’re in the NFL and you might accumulate a lot of money in a short period of time. So, it was really a real-life experience like me. I went to a school like Stanford, but I learned this for the first time on my own.

“I know that there are a lot of other people experiencing this, but even more so, the youth,” said Thomas, who also has an MBA degree. He made financial literacy an integral part of his football camp for kids. “Anytime I have the resources, anytime I have to knowledge, I want to always make sure I give it back to my community.”

Retired Pro Bowl defensive end Adewale Ogunleye says financial literacy should be mandatory through all levels of education. He said when he entered the NFL, he had financial advisers, but he was too proud to tell them he didn’t understand what they were talking about.

“I would just shake my head a lot and act like I knew what they were saying, but I didn’t know what a basis point was, even though I had millions in the bank,” he said. “And at that moment I realized this is how I’ve been risking my hard-earned money. I didn’t even understand the basic fundamentals of money. So that’s what made me go back to school and get my MBA.”



‘Coach Prime’ Deion Sanders and Jackson State head to Grambling in his first major test Read now


The Undefeated 44 most influential black Americans in history Read now


When will the NBA All-Star Game feature another HBCU player? Read now

Today, Ogunleye is head of sports and entertainment at UBS, where he said he hopes to educate today’s athletes and entertainers and break down the stigma attached to professional athletes, making poor financial decisions and going broke within a few years after retiring from sports. He says that financial literacy should be mandatory through all levels of education. UBS has announced that it will sponsor 2,000 children selected by the Goalsetter Foundation and deposit $40 into a new savings account for each one, plus funding for access to the financial literacy curriculum for five years.

“And at that moment I realized this is how I’ve been risking my hard-earned money. I didn’t even understand the basic fundamentals of money. So that’s what made me go back to school and get my MBA.” – Adewale Ogunleye, head of sports and entertainment at UBS

Ogunleye says parents need to begin conversations about money with their children early. “I’m blessed enough that my kids, they’re 4 and 5, already have their own bank accounts. And in the span of a lifetime, I’ve been able to change the fortunes of my family’s trajectory.”

Thomas said Black parents aren’t having the frank conversations with their kids about the financial lessons they learned, almost as if it were taboo. “They should say, ‘I probably should have started saving a lot sooner than I did so I would have had money for a rainy day or invest or start a business.’ Or, ‘I ran up credit cards early, not really understanding, interest, and having to pay those things back, and it hurt me. It hurt my credit score. I wasn’t able to get the house that I wanted or a car I wanted until [I] repaired my credit.’

“We need those real conversations first,” he said. “It’s so beneficial in a household. And that’s something parents have to admit to themselves and be comfortable sharing. Not everybody is ready to admit their mistakes. But having those conversations is very beneficial because they’ll teach our kids.”

Rodney Brooks is a retirement and personal finance writer/author. He has written a retirement a column for USA TODAY and the Washington Post. He is passionate about financial literacy and music. And has more than 12,000 songs on his iPod.


Credit: Source link

ShareTweetSendSharePinShare
Previous Post

Savannah City Council seeks hotel/motel tax bump to finance infrastructure

Next Post

Former women’s basketball player pays homage to her sport and Black women with new documentary — The Undefeated

Next Post
Former women’s basketball player pays homage to her sport and Black women with new documentary — The Undefeated

Former women’s basketball player pays homage to her sport and Black women with new documentary — The Undefeated

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
7-Year-Old Black Boy Writes His First Book About a Superhero Who Loves Making the World a Safer Place

7-Year-Old Writes First Book About Superhero Who Loves Making the World a Safer Place

January 15, 2023
Tyler Perry’s Sistas’ Devale Ellis and Crystal Hayslett Trumpet ‘Zatima’ — Plus, Get the Season 3B Premiere Date

Tyler Perry’s Sistas’ Devale Ellis and Crystal Hayslett Trumpet ‘Zatima’ — Plus, Get the Season 3B Premiere Date

August 25, 2021
Season 3, Episode 30 – Heart Health, Business Health, and History in the Black Community – Black Press USA

Season 3, Episode 30 – Heart Health, Business Health, and History in the Black Community – Black Press USA

October 29, 2022
Prime Time Calendar: May 2022 | Arts & entertainment

Prime Time Calendar: May 2022 | Arts & entertainment

April 11, 2022
Cadillac Williams excited about being a head coach in the Iron Bowl – Alabama's News Leader

Cadillac Williams excited about being a head coach in the Iron Bowl – Alabama's News Leader

November 22, 2022
Copy of MLK Commemorative Event

Copy of MLK Commemorative Event

January 30, 2023
Pitts: Mississippi’s water woes an embarrassment

Oregon voice for racial equality Willie Richardson dies

January 30, 2023
Federal Proposal of ‘MENA’ Category Long Overdue, Advocates Say – NECN

Federal Proposal of ‘MENA’ Category Long Overdue, Advocates Say – NECN

January 30, 2023
Westfield's Chinese Community Celebrates Lunar New Year with … – TAPinto.net

Westfield's Chinese Community Celebrates Lunar New Year with … – TAPinto.net

January 30, 2023
Breckenridge honors pioneering Black civil rights advocate and entrepreneur Barney Ford ahead of Black History Month

Breckenridge honors pioneering Black civil rights advocate and entrepreneur Barney Ford ahead of Black History Month

January 30, 2023

Recent News

‘He was a giant, a humble man and my superman.’ – Chicago Tribune

‘He was a giant, a humble man and my superman.’ – Chicago Tribune

January 29, 2023
Women, minorities lose ground in tech layoffs

Women, minorities lose ground in tech layoffs

January 28, 2023
Black stories, culture, and Hollywood

Black stories, culture, and Hollywood

January 23, 2023
Your guide to Black History Month events around Wisconsin

Your guide to Black History Month events around Wisconsin

January 25, 2023
OvaNewsBlast.com

A reliable source for African American news, from a different lens. Yours. News about us, by us.

Follow Us

Recent News

Copy of MLK Commemorative Event

Copy of MLK Commemorative Event

January 30, 2023
Pitts: Mississippi’s water woes an embarrassment

Oregon voice for racial equality Willie Richardson dies

January 30, 2023

Topics to cover !

  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • News
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Get in Touch
  • Get in Touch with our Support!
  • Privacy Policy

© 2020 ovanewsblast.com - All rights reserved!   Download Our App   Read News on odbnewsblast.com

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Entertainment

© 2020 ovanewsblast.com - All rights reserved!   Download Our App   Read News on odbnewsblast.com