Coaching Around Money

Teaching students about AI and financial literacy

A partner of ours will will be teaching students about AI and financial literacy, and we will be experimenting with a new initiative and working with them to be an extension of their program!

What you need to know about this experiment

  • This will occur for 4 weeks on Wednesdays, during weekly Clayful times, starting on 3/26 and completing on 4/30.
  • Students are in 12th grade. There are two different sites doing this, across 4 class periods.
  • Your shift will be labeled: Clayful Time: Money Week #
    • keep in mind not all YP coming to chat are from this school
  • A YP that is part of this initiative will come in to the chat making a coaching request around money, AI or preparing for the future. For example you might see them say:
I spend more $ when I’m stressed or bored. Can you help me understand why? Can you help me think about what patterns I have with money and what they might say about me?

This will cue you to coach to this topic! Below is a guide to support you in creating meaningful conversations that will integrate with their financial literacy curriculum. Be sure to take this examples into your own words, with your own personality!

What to Do if a YP Isn't Engaging

These students are seniors, and sometimes seniors can feel checked out of school—especially near the end of the year. If a young person gives short answers or doesn’t seem interested, here are some ways to spark engagement:

1. Acknowledge and Validate

Sometimes, naming what’s happening can open the door to a real conversation. Try a direct but non-judgmental statement:

🗣 Hey, I see you're a senior. A lot of seniors feel kind of over school by this point in the year. Does that feel true for you?

If they agree, you can follow up with an open-ended question to meet them where they’re at:

💬 That makes a lot of sense. So, what would make this conversation actually useful for you today?

2. Make It Personal & Relevant

If they’re disengaged, they may not see how the topic connects to their real life. Help them bridge the gap:

💡 Let’s be real…money is going to play a big role in your life after high school. What's something about money that actually matters to you right now? Saving for something? Making money? Avoiding stress about it?

3. Challenge Them with a Meaningful Opportunity

Some young people respond well to a little challenge. Instead of pushing, invite them into a new way of thinking:

🔥 I wonder…what might you gain if you really put some effort into understanding your money habits now, before you're out in the real world?
🔥 A lot of people don’t figure out their relationship with money until they’re struggling with it. What if you could be ahead of the game?

4. Offer Choices & Control

Giving them control over the conversation can help them re-engage:

👀 We can go in a few directions…do you want to talk about money habits, making more money, or something else? You get to choose what’s most useful for you.

Question Guide

These open-ended questions invite young people to explore their beliefs, experiences, and goals around money. Feel free to adapt them based on what feels most relevant in the conversation.

Exploring Beliefs & Emotions

  • Where is it easy for you to spend money? Where do you feel tension or discomfort about money?
  • If you were given $100 today, what would you do with it? Why?
  • How do you feel when you have money? How do you feel when you don’t?
  • What messages about money did you hear growing up?
  • What do you think you are believing about money (or about yourself) when you spend/ save the way you do?
  • Do you prefer to save or spend? What influences that choice?

Building Financial Confidence

  • What’s a money decision you’re proud of?
  • What’s one small shift you could make with money that would feel good?
  • What do you feel you CAN control when it comes to money?

Tips for Normalizing Conversations About Money

Money is personal. It’s tied to emotions, family history, and personal identity. Some young people may feel shame, stress, or uncertainty when talking about it. Your role is to create a space where exploration feels safe and shame-free.

  • Acknowledge Different Money Stories – Everyone has a different experience with money—there’s no right or wrong way to feel about it.
  • Normalize Shame Around Money – A lot of people feel embarrassed or ashamed about money. It’s completely normal to have those feelings. And you have the power to create a different relationship with money—even if you don’t feel that way YET
  • Challenge Judgment & Labels – Money isn’t good or bad—it’s just a tool. The way we use it can change over time.
  • Emphasize Growth – Money habits aren’t set in stone. Just like any skill, you can build new ways of working with money that align with what you want.

Making Powerful Offerings and Assertions

Trust your intuition as a coach. If it feels right, offer statements that reinforce agency, confidence, and possibility.

  • 💡 Money is a skill. – Just like learning to ride a bike or play a sport, you can build money skills over time.
  • 💡 You are in control. – Your choices with money can create options and opportunities for you.
  • 💡 Mistakes are learning moments. – Everyone makes money mistakes—it’s how you learn and grow.
  • 💡 Small habits make a big difference. – Even saving a little bit consistently can build a strong habit and make an impact over time.

What You Might Hear in Chat:

YP may come in saying things like:

💬 “Sometimes I feel like I never have enough money, even when I actually do.”
💬 “I spend money when I’m stressed out and bored.”

Examples of bold assertions to spark conversation:

➡️ “I have a guess that you’re thinking a lot about your future and want to make sure you can take care of yourself. So even when you technically have ‘enough,’ it still doesn’t feel like it. What do you think about that?”
➡️ “I wonder if part of you doesn’t trust that money you can make money easily, so you’re always bracing for it to run out. Does that feel true to you?”
➡️ “Maybe you don’t actually know how much money would feel like ‘enough,’ so without a specific number in mind, your brain just assumes you always need more.”

Check In on How It Lands

👀 “Does that feel true for you?”
💬 “What do you think?”

If It Doesn’t Land, Get Curious!

🔍 “Would you say it differently?”
🔍 “What feels kinda true, and what doesn’t?”
🔍 “If you had to take a guess, what would you say instead?”

Extra Assertions for Common Money Struggles

If YP says: “Sometimes I feel like I never have enough money, even when I actually do.”

💡 Assertion: “I wonder if you equate money with security, and since security always feels uncertain, money never feels like ‘enough.’”

If YP says: “I spend money when I’m stressed out and bored.”

💡 Assertion: “I have a guess that spending money feels like a way to shift your mood when you’re overwhelmed—like it gives you control when you’re feeling out of control. Does that feel true?”
💡 Assertion: “I wonder if part of you believes that spending money equals self-care, even though sometimes it doesn’t actually feel that way afterward.”

Final Thought

You don’t need to be a financial expert—you just need to be curious, open, and present. Your coaching can help young people see their relationship with money in a new way, opening the door to awareness, choice, and empowerment.