Learning outcomes
- Explain the Cash vs S&S vs Lifetime ISA decision at a Year 10-11 level
- Teach credit card mechanics including APR, minimum payment trap and Section 75
- Deliver an apprenticeship-vs-university money comparison lesson
- Plan a 6-lesson KS4 unit using site resources
- Bridge effectively into the post-16 / KS5 phase
Before you start
- Allow a quiet hour.
- Open the 14-16 hub and 16-18 hub in tabs.
- The ISAs lesson and credit cards lesson are the technical anchors.
1Why KS4 needs product-specific teaching10 min
KS4 is where vague "financial literacy" becomes concrete product knowledge. By end of Year 11, pupils need to be able to:
- Compare Cash ISA, Stocks & Shares ISA, and Lifetime ISA
- Read a credit card statement and explain APR, minimum payment, the interest trap
- Know mortgage basics — deposit, term, rate, the 4.5x salary rule
- Calculate compound interest accurately
- Recognise and refuse money mule recruitment
- Make an evidenced decision about post-16 routes (A-levels, BTEC, T-Level, apprenticeship)
This is more technical than KS3. The cognitive demand is higher. The 24 KS1-KS4 lesson plans on this site — particularly the 6 KS4 plans — are designed precisely for this technical depth.
Which of these six product-knowledge areas is currently weakest in your KS4 scheme?
2Teaching the ISA framework10 min
ISAs are the most pedagogically important financial product at KS4 because they are:
- Universal — nearly every pupil will use one at 18+
- Tax-protective — a permanent shelter, not a fad
- Decision-rich — the Cash/S&S/LISA choice teaches matching wrappers to goals
- Free of conflict — not selling anything, no commercial bias
The KS4-appropriate framework: match the wrapper to the horizon.
| Goal horizon | Wrapper | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Under 3 years | Cash ISA | No market risk, predictable interest |
| 5+ years, flexible | S&S ISA | Growth potential, tax-protected |
| First home OR retirement | LISA | 25% government bonus, but locked |
| Anything else | S&S ISA | LISA penalty rules out other uses |
The KS4 ISA lesson includes a worked decision tree for typical pupil situations. The 16-18 LISA guide is the in-depth reference for follow-up.
3Teaching credit cards without moralising10 min
Credit cards are the technical area where most teachers either over-warn ("never get one") or under-warn ("it's just money"). Neither lands.
The KS4-appropriate framing:
- What a credit card is. A pre-approved loan you can use, repay monthly, and pay no interest IF you clear in full every month.
- The interest trap. Carry £1,000 at 23% APR paying the minimum (~£25/month) takes ~12 years and ~£1,400 in interest.
- Section 75. UK law: credit card purchases £100-£30,000 are protected against retailer default or fraud. Genuine consumer right.
- 0% balance transfers. Legitimate strategy for clearing existing debt faster.
- Credit score impact. Used carefully, builds credit. Used badly, destroys it for years.
The right adult framing isn't "never use credit" — it's "credit cards used in full-payment mode are useful tools; partial-payment mode is a wealth-destroyer". The KS4 credit cards lesson uses this approach.
4The apprenticeship-vs-university money comparison10 min
The single most important post-16 decision conversation pupils need before end of Year 11. The honest framework:
| University | Apprenticeship | |
|---|---|---|
| Costs while studying | £60k+ Plan 5 loan (paid 30 years out of income above £25k) | £0 cost; some take-home pay |
| Income age 18-21 | ~£0 (loan only) | ~£12-22k apprentice wage |
| Income age 25 | Highly subject-dependent — ~£25-35k typical | Highly sector-dependent — ~£25-40k typical |
| Income age 35 | ~£35-45k median; very wide spread | ~£30-45k for skilled trades / digital / finance |
| Best for | Career routes requiring degree (medicine, academia, civil service) | Career routes that value early experience (digital, finance, trades, hospitality) |
The framing pupils need: route depends 60% on subject, 30% on what you do with the qualification, 10% on which qualification it is. The apprenticeship-vs-university lesson walks through this with worked lifetime-earnings cases.
The 14-16 BTEC/A-level/T-Level/apprenticeship guide is the deeper reference for pupils choosing post-16 routes now.
5A 6-lesson KS4 sequence10 min
A unit that works in Year 10 or early Year 11:
| Week | Lesson |
|---|---|
| 1 | ISAs explained |
| 2 | Credit cards — how they work |
| 3 | Mortgages basics |
| 4 | Scam awareness for teens |
| 5 | Apprenticeship vs university money |
| 6 | Budgeting for sixth form / college |
If you could fit four of these six in PSHE timetable, which four would you pick? Where would the remaining two go — assemblies, tutor time, careers?
6Bridging into the post-16 phase10 min
The single biggest reason KS4 finance teaching fails is that it stops at Year 11. Pupils carry partial knowledge into a much higher-stakes environment.
Things that help bridge:
- Year 11 careers programme. Use the 16-18 hub resources in tutor time — first salary, student finance, emergency fund.
- Leavers' assembly. A 20-minute "things you'll need to know" session covering tax codes, NMW rates, opening a bank account.
- Parent engagement. The parent hub and first-paycheck conversation pack bridge family knowledge gaps that schools can't reach directly.
- Sixth-form induction. Many UK sixth forms welcome a brief "financial wellbeing" element in week 1 induction. The 16-18 deep guides are designed for exactly this.
What handover currently exists in your school between KS4 finance and post-16 / careers? Where is the gap?
I completed this CPD module
Name:
School / Setting:
Date completed:
UK Tax Drag · Delivering KS4 financial education — a 60-minute CPD module · v1.0 · CC BY 4.0
UK Tax Drag (2026). Delivering KS4 financial education — a 60-minute CPD module. Teacher CPD module. Available at: https://kids.uktaxdrag.co.uk/teacher-cpd-ks4.html
CC BY 4.0. Free to use, photocopy and adapt for school CPD programmes.