My College Money Plan (MCMP)
Learn how to plan effectively for your current and future financial well-being, while enhancing your money management skills with the My College Money Plan online resources. The link below will get you to the My College Money Plan website so you can choose the financial literacy topic that is most relevant to your needs and interests. To receive participation points you must join the 好色先生-Student Support Services class by entering the Class Code provided by your SSS adviser.
***NOTE: If you created a My College Money Plan student account prior to student email conversion to Outlook, you might experience difficulty logging into your account. Please email our office for assistance at trio.sss@wichita.edu.
Online Resources for Financial Education
Build a customized list of financial resources for your library with these websites, videos, and courses from federal government agencies, national nonprofit organizations, and state and local resources.
This is the only source to get free credit reports authorized by federal law. This law requires each of the three largest consumer credit reporting agencies to give you a free copy of your credit report every 12 months.
A comprehensive financial tool that provides personalized insight and advice based
on income, credit score, and debt-to-income ratio. Has a variety of helpful resources
to help people reduce their debt, make important purchasing decisions and improve
their overall financial health.
Run by the U.S. CFTC, SmartCheck connects investors to tools to check the registration,
license, and disciplinary history of certain financial professionals.
Decode the letters that sometimes follow a financial professional鈥檚 name. You can
also see whether the issuing organization requires continuing education, takes complaints
or has a way for you to confirm who holds the credential.
Search for broker dealers to confirm they are properly registered and check their
disciplinary histories.
Unbiased financial tools and information for investors, with special information for
military families and help for investors to avoid investment fraud.
A site to help investors at all experience levels understand how to invest wisely
and avoid fraud.
The Making Home Affordable Program (MHA) 庐 is a critical part of the Obama Administration鈥檚
broad strategy to help homeowners avoid foreclosure, stabilize the country鈥檚 housing
market, and improve the nation鈥檚 economy.
This online tool uses information from the Department of Housing and Urban Development
(HUD) to find HUD-certified housing counselors near you. HUD counselors can provide
advice on buying a home, renting, defaults, foreclosures, and credit issues.
Target audience: Young adults
Target audiences: High school and college students and younger adults
Target audiences: Young children and parents
A resource for parents and caregivers that identifies key stages of childhood financial
development and provides essential and age-appropriate money lessons that kids need
to know.
A turnkey financial literacy program offered in partnership with the U.S. Department
of Agriculture National Institute for Food and Agriculture (USDA NIFA) through participating
Land-Grant University Cooperative Extension Services (CES) and the Credit Union National
Association, Inc. (CUNA).
Personal finance and economic lessons are paired with popular children鈥檚 books. Librarians
can read the book to the children and follow the reading with discussions about money
decisions, saving, spending, choices, needs and wants and much more. Includes lesson
plans and handouts.
This site helps military members and their families get their finances in order and
plan for a healthy financial future.
This site focuses on financial education as a lifelong endeavor鈥攆rom children learning
about the value of money to adults reaching a secure retirement.
The Ballpark E$timate is an easy-to-use worksheet that helps you approximate how much
you need to save to fund a comfortable retirement.
The Retirement Estimator gives benefits estimates based on your actual Social Security
earnings record.
Tools and information can help you make better informed decisions.
Get information about preparing for college, types of federal aid, how to apply for
aid using the free application for federal student aid (FAFSA); and your loan repayment
options.
The Financial Aid Toolkit provides federal student aid information and outreach tools
for counselors, college access professionals, nonprofit mentors, and others.
The official web portal of the U.S. government. USA.gov contains timely and valuable
government information and resources on a variety of topics including consumer protection,
small business, benefits, health insurance, taxes and more.
The National Credit Union Administration鈥檚 consumer protection website MyCreditUnion.gov,
and its financial literacy microsite, Pocket Cents, offer a variety of educational
information, resources, and articles designed to help individuals make smarter financial
decisions.
Includes easy-to-read and understand resources for basic money management, credit,
scams, and ID theft.
Provides answers to common money questions.
Provides a variety of financial education topics, from basic money management to credit
and debt management, to long-term savings and more.
Are you withholding to much or too little from your paycheck? Did you get married,
divorced or have a child? Use this calculator to determine whether or not you need
to file a new W-4.
An instructor-led training developed jointly by FDIC and CFPB, this module provides
awareness among older adults and their caregivers about how to prevent elder financial
exploitation and to encourage advance planning and informed financial decision-making.