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Parents: Time for Your College-Bound Student to Get Some Financial Savvy

By: Contributor Last Updated: July 21, 2010

Listen up, parents of college-bound children. If your student isn't prepared to handle his or her financial affairs, it's time for a money-management crash course.

Sharon Burns, a clinical associate professor in Purdue University's Department of Consumer Sciences and Retailing, offers this timetable for getting your student financially ready for college:

Getting a credit card with a low limit, such as $500, is an option. Or parents may want to obtain another card on their account with the student's name on it. If your child does get a credit card, refuse overdraft protection. That way, if the student attempts to charge more than the limit, the card is declined at the point of sale. Under a new law, students who don't have their own source of income to qualify for credit will need a parent to co-sign.

One last item: no cheating. The student needs to submit a spending plan for your approval. Don't develop it for him or her. And include your student in all processes, such as opening accounts, completing financial aid forms and applying for credit. After all, college education aside, when it comes to money, experience is the best teacher.