Money sort
Needs, wants, saving jars and coin recognition. Best for a short primary activity.
Use these worksheet routes when you need something printable, structured and discussion-led. Each task can be used without accounts, logins or personal financial disclosure.
Needs, wants, saving jars and coin recognition. Best for a short primary activity.
Plan a small spend, explain the trade-off, then improve the choice with one change.
Gross pay, take-home pay, simple tax language and "what changed?" questions.
Read a simplified payslip, spot borrowing risk, and write a safer next step.
Compare ISA, pension, student money and first-job decisions without making product recommendations.
Older learners use one calculator, change one input, and explain why the answer moved.
A worksheet should test one useful idea, not become a mini textbook.
The best question is often "what changed when the input changed?" rather than "what is the answer?"
Use fictional households and fictional salaries to keep the room safe.
Use the answer-key PDFs when you want prompts, misconceptions and extension questions.