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Teacher CPD · KS2 (ages 7-11)

Delivering KS2 financial education — a 60-minute CPD module

A 60-minute module on KS2 financial education. Covers the developmental shift from concrete to abstract money thinking, the first introduction of tax and online safety, classroom techniques for Y3-6, and how to use the site's KS2 resources.

Audience
KS2 (Year 3-6) teachers, primary PSHE leads
Duration
60 minutes
Format
Self-paced read · printable
Curriculum
Maths Y3-6 Money, PSHE Association KS2 L17-L22, Citizenship KS2
Version
1.0 · CC BY 4.0
Last reviewed
2026-05-11

Learning outcomes

Before you start

1The KS1-to-KS2 cognitive shift10 min

Between ages 7 and 11, children transition from concrete operational to early formal operational thinking (Piaget). For finance teaching, the practical implications:

EEF evidence, financial mathematics 2022UK 9-11 year-olds taught with concrete-to-abstract progression (CRA model) outperformed pure-abstract teaching by an effect size of 0.4. Translation: don't skip the manipulatives in Year 5/6 just because pupils "should be able to do the maths."

Apply this in your teaching:

2Introducing tax at KS210 min

The PSHE Association curriculum lists "where money comes from" and "how money is used in society" at KS2. This is the natural home for first tax teaching. But it has to land at a Year 4-6 reading age.

The approach that works:

  1. Start with what tax buys. Schools, NHS, roads, libraries, parks. Tangible. Year 4 pupils can list what they use that's "free" and start to realise it isn't really free.
  2. Then the coin demo. Out of every £10 a grown-up earns, ~£3 goes to tax + NI + pension. The 9-11 parent conversation pack has the full demo script.
  3. Personal Allowance only briefly. "Adults can earn £12,570 before tax starts" is the right level. The bracket structure waits until KS3.
  4. The fairness conversation. "If we didn't pay tax, who would pay for these things?" Genuinely open question. Don't moralise.

The 10-13 deep guide on what tax pays for is at exactly the right reading level for Year 5-6 to read independently.

3Online money safety at KS210 min

KS2 is where online money safety needs to start in earnest. By Year 5-6, most UK children have:

Ofcom Children & Parents Media Use, 202462% of UK 8-11 year-olds have seen an "earn money easily" video on TikTok or YouTube. 11% have considered acting on one. The gateway to money mule recruitment opens earlier than most teachers realise.

KS2 online safety teaching focuses on:

  1. Spotting fake "you won" messages. The 7 scams and 5 tricks guide is the framework.
  2. Never sharing PINs or passwords. Bank apps, gaming accounts, parents' devices.
  3. "Free" isn't always free. In-game purchases, "free trial" billing.
  4. If something feels off, tell a grown-up. The single most important habit.

The KS2 online money safety lesson is a complete 45-minute session ready to deliver.

4A 6-lesson KS2 sequence10 min

A unit that works across half a term:

Adapt to your year group. Years 3-4 can do lessons 1-3 in any order; Years 5-6 should hit lesson 6 (online safety) regardless of which other 2-3 you pick.

Reflection 1

Looking at your current Year [X] scheme, where could you slot 4-6 of these lessons over a half-term?

5Safeguarding flags specific to KS210 min

KS2 finance lessons surface safeguarding concerns more often than KS1 because pupils have more language to disclose. Watch for:

Standard safeguarding protocol applies. The class teacher passes to the designated safeguarding lead (DSL). Don't investigate yourself.

6Extending beyond the classroom10 min

The single biggest multiplier for KS2 finance learning is parent partnership. Three concrete ways:

  1. Send home the parent conversation packs. The 9-11 tax pack and 12-14 scams pack (used early with Year 6) are designed for kitchen-table use.
  2. Link to age-band deep guides in homework. "Read the tax page with a grown-up before next lesson." The page does the heavy lifting.
  3. Hold a parent-evening session. The staff-meeting pack is also adaptable for a 30-minute parent session.
Reflection 2

What is one parent-partnership extension you could realistically add to your current KS2 finance teaching this term?

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UK Tax Drag · Delivering KS2 financial education — a 60-minute CPD module · v1.0 · CC BY 4.0

Cite this module
UK Tax Drag (2026). Delivering KS2 financial education — a 60-minute CPD module. Teacher CPD module. Available at: https://kids.uktaxdrag.co.uk/teacher-cpd-ks2.html
CC BY 4.0. Free to use, photocopy and adapt for school CPD programmes.
Not formally accredited. This module is free professional development content. It is not Ofsted-certified, not CPD-accredited by a chartered body, and does not count toward GTCS / TRA / DfE formal teaching qualifications. It is designed for personal use and can be embedded in a school’s own CPD programme at the head’s discretion.