Learning aim
Pupils can plan how to use a small amount of money across three choices: spending now, saving for later, and giving.
National Curriculum links
- Maths Y2: Money: solve problems involving money including giving change
- PSHE Association KS1 L8: about the role money plays in their lives including how to keep it safe
- Citizenship KS1: choices and the consequences of choices
What you'll need
- Three labelled jars or pots: SPEND, SAVE, SHARE
- Pretend coins or counters (50p total per pupil)
- Decision worksheet showing four scenarios
- Three-pot pocket money planner
Lesson structure (45 minutes)
HOOK
TEACH
GUIDED
CHALLENGE
PLENARY
Adapting for all learners
Support (working below ARE)
Use 30p total instead of 50p. Provide a pre-printed split (10p spend, 15p save, 5p share) for pupils to copy onto their planner, then adjust if they wish.
Stretch (working above ARE)
Pupils plan three weeks of pocket money in advance, choosing a specific saving goal and calculating how long it will take to reach.
SEND adaptations
For pupils with dyscalculia: use only 30p across the three jars to keep numbers small. For pupils with autism: provide a visual planner with predefined options to choose from rather than open-ended decisions.
EAL support
Pre-teach: "spend", "save", "share", "split", "plan", "weekly". Sentence stems: "I will spend ___p because ___" and "I will save ___p to ___".
Assessment criteria
Pupils can: (1) divide 50p across three jars with at least 5p in each; (2) explain in a sentence why they chose their split; (3) calculate how many weeks they'd need to save to reach a small goal.
Homework
Talk to a grown-up at home about how they split their pocket money when they were a child. Draw or write what they tell you.
Classroom safeguarding
Related lesson plans
- Saving and spending — when do we choose each? (KS1 · Year 2)
- Shopping basket challenge — can you stay in budget? (KS1 · Year 1 / Year 2)
- All KS1 + KS2 lesson plans →