The courses are being dubbed “MBA programmes for children” - a reference to Master of Business Administration (MBA) programmes - because of the young age of the pupils and the high tuition fees. The courses are being offered by a financial tutorial institute in Chengdu so primary school-aged children can learn personal financial management from mainly overseas experts.
Xinhua reported that the institute had now organised its first term for pupils since it was established last August. At present, 40 pupils, aged between seven and 11, are enrolled. Most are born to millionaire or billionaire families, the report said.
These children will take the courses for three hours a week. The entire curriculum lasts two years with a tuition fee of 60,000 yuan. Institute director Fang Yuan says the courses train a child’s “financial quotient” – which is similar to intelligence quotient (IQ) and emotional quotient (EQ). Financial quotient measures a person’s ability to understand and manage money, she explains.
“Instead of telling them to save money, we teach them how to create a fortune. On advanced courses, we develop their investment awareness, so they can learn that ‘money makes money’,” Fang adds.
The four full-time lecturers on the programme are mostly former English school teachers. They all have financial quotient tutorial certificates from Britain paid for by the institute in Chengdu, Xinhua reported. The remainder of the part-time lecturers are education experts who fly out from Britain every three or four months to give lectures. Writes Chris Luo for South China Morning Post.