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KS3 · Year 7 / Year 9 · Lesson plan

First bank accounts at 11-15 — features and safe habits

A classroom-ready 50 minutes lesson plan with starter, main, plenary, differentiation, SEND adaptations, EAL support and assessment criteria. Free to use, no login.

Key Stage
KS3
Year group
Year 7 / Year 9
Age range
11–14
Duration
50 minutes
Subject
Maths / PSHE / Citizenship
Cost
Free

Learning aim

Pupils can identify the features of a UK teen bank account (debit card, online banking, contactless) and explain three safe-banking habits.

CURRICULUM National Curriculum links

RESOURCES What you'll need

LESSON Lesson structure (50 minutes)

Opening
HOOK
Hold up (or display) a debit card. Ask: "How many of you have one of these already?" Hands up. Then: "How many of you know someone who has lost their card or had someone try to use it without permission?" Use as anchor: "Then we need to know how to use these things safely."
Direct teach
TEACH
Walk through the key features of UK teen bank accounts (available from age 11 at most high-street banks): Debit card with contactless capability (under-18 limit usually £100); Online banking app; Parental view (parent can see balance/transactions); No overdraft for under-18s (deliberate — protects from debt); Sometimes pocket money allowance built in. Then introduce THREE safe-banking habits: (1) PIN protection — never share, hide when entering, change if seen; (2) Never share card details online — banks NEVER text or email asking for them; (3) Check statements regularly — look for unfamiliar transactions and report immediately.
Pupils apply
GUIDED
Pupils work in pairs through 6 scenarios on the worksheet: "Your friend asks for your PIN to buy something" / "An email arrives saying your bank account is locked — click here to unlock" / "A text asks you to confirm a transaction with a code — do you reply?" / "You see a £45 charge you don't recognise on your statement" etc. For each, pupils write: (1) is this safe behaviour or a red flag? (2) what's the right action? Discuss together.
Stretch / depth
CHALLENGE
Real-world scenario: "Your card is lost. You tell your parent but don't ring the bank for two days. In those two days, £200 is spent on contactless purchases. Are you responsible for the £200?" Discuss in pairs. Build the answer: UK banking rules say if you report PROMPTLY and weren't negligent, the bank usually refunds. Delay = risk. Build the rule: "If you lose your card, the FIRST call is to the bank — even before telling your parents."
Close
PLENARY
Each pupil writes their TOP TWO safe-banking habits. Share three. Final question: "What's the FIRST thing to do if your card is stolen?" (Call the bank to freeze the card.)

DIFFERENTIATION 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 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 EAL support

Vocabulary: "PIN", "contactless", "online banking", "fraud", "transaction", "statement", "overdraft", "debit card". Sentence frame: "If ___ happens, the safe thing to do is ___."

ASSESSMENT 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.

HOME Homework

With a grown-up, look at your (or their) bank app or paper statement. Find: one transaction this week, one transaction last month, and the current balance. You don't need to share specific amounts — just the categories of transactions.

SAFEGUARDING Classroom safeguarding

Note for teachers: Some pupils may not have bank accounts for cultural, religious, or financial reasons. Frame the lesson as "when you do get one, here's what you need to know" — don't assume everyone will have one. Do not ask pupils to share their actual balances or transactions.

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