Learning aim
Pupils can identify the features of a UK teen bank account (debit card, online banking, contactless) and explain three safe-banking habits.
National Curriculum links
- PSHE Association KS3 L24: about the role of money in their lives
- PSHE Association KS3 L25: ways to save and be a sensible consumer
- Computing KS3: use technology safely, respectfully, responsibly and securely
- Citizenship KS3: personal finance and financial products
What you'll need
- Teen bank account comparison handout (3 anonymised UK examples)
- Online safety checklist
- "PIN protection" role-play scenarios
- Worksheet
Lesson structure (50 minutes)
HOOK
TEACH
GUIDED
CHALLENGE
PLENARY
Adapting for all learners
Support (working below ARE)
Focus on 3 scenarios instead of 6. Use picture-led prompts. Provide simple "yes / no" decisions rather than open-ended actions.
Stretch (working above ARE)
Pupils design a "safe banking poster" for the school corridor listing 5 habits, with a real fraud statistic from the UK Finance website (e.g. £1.2bn stolen in 2023).
SEND adaptations
For pupils with autism: provide clear, literal "if X happens, do Y" rules rather than abstract scenarios. For visually impaired pupils: use audio descriptions of statements rather than printed examples. For pupils with anxiety: emphasise that most online banking is safe — the lesson is preparation, not paranoia.
EAL support
Vocabulary: "PIN", "contactless", "online banking", "fraud", "transaction", "statement", "overdraft", "debit card". Sentence frame: "If ___ happens, the safe thing to do is ___."
Assessment criteria
Pupils can: (1) name three teen bank account features; (2) identify a scam scenario from a real-style example; (3) explain what to do if a card is lost; (4) name two safe-banking habits.
Homework pack
Four activities about teen bank accounts and how to choose one. ~25 minutes.
Account-feature investigation
What pupils do: Research 3 UK teen accounts (HSBC MyAccount, Nationwide FlexOne, Santander 11-17 — or others). Find: minimum age, debit card type, mobile app available?
Expected output: A 3-row comparison table with 3 columns each.
Marking guidance: 1 mark per accurate cell. 9 marks total.
The right account for me
What pupils do: Based on your research, write 200 words explaining which account would suit a 13-year-old who: (a) wants to learn about money, (b) gets pocket money in cash, (c) sometimes shops online.
Expected output: A 200-word reasoned recommendation.
Marking guidance: 4 marks for clear reasoning, 2 marks for accurate facts, 2 marks for genuine fit to the persona. 8 marks total.
Statement reading
What pupils do: Ask a parent to show you (with personal info covered) a bank statement. Identify: a deposit, a withdrawal, a payment, and the balance. Define each in your own words.
Expected output: A definition list of 4 banking terms.
Marking guidance: 1 mark per definition. 4 marks total.
Extension (optional)
What pupils do: What is "overdraft"? Find 3 reasons it can be useful and 3 reasons it can be dangerous. Show both sides.
Expected output: A 6-point balanced argument.
Marking guidance: Up to 6 marks for accurate, balanced reasoning.
Family discussion prompt (safeguarding-aware)
Ask a grown-up: "What made you choose the bank you use? Have you ever switched? What would make you switch?"