A campaign to make personal finance a California high school graduation requirement submitted nearly 900,000 signatures this week to qualify a statewide ballot measure for the November election.
The group, Californians for Financial Education, is led by Palo Alto entrepreneur Tim Ranzetta, who says he is fed up after two decades of failed legislative efforts to incorporate money management into the state’s school curricula.
“Less than 1% of California high school students are guaranteed to take this course and that number nationally is 53%,” he said on Tuesday, March 13 in an interview. “I feel that this is something California students urgently deserve as we lead the nation in so many ways, and yet when it comes personal finance education we’ve fallen behind. This ballot initiative is an opportunity to level the playing field for all Californians.”
Ranzetta poured $7 million of his money into the signature-gathering effort and is now waiting for county registrars to verify at least 546,651 valid signatures for the measure to make it onto the November ballot. The campaign has the support of Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond, State Controller Malia Cohen and State Treasurer Fiona Ma.
If approved by voters, the measure would require all school districts to offer a high school personal finance course in the 2026-27 school year and make the class a graduation requirement by the 2029-30 school year. The envisioned course would cover topics like understanding how to finance college, developing a personal budget, building credit, watching out for predatory loans, making investments and avoiding scams.
Ranzetta is the co-founder of nonprofit Next Gen Personal Finance, which has led advocacy efforts to make personal finance courses a requirement in states across the country and helped train thousands of educators to teach the courses.
Currently 25 states have some form of a personal finance requirement, 17 of which were introduced in the…
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