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KS2 · Year 3-6 · 6-week unit

KS2 Money & Society — 6-week scheme of work

A complete 6-lesson scheme of work for KS2 covering how banks work, making change, comparison shopping, saving for a goal, charitable giving, and online money safety. Each lesson 45 minutes. Assessment included.

Key Stage
KS2
Year group
Year 3-6
Age range
7–11
Duration
6 × 45-minute lessons
Subject
PSHE / Maths / Citizenship
Cost
Free

Learning aim

By the end of the 6-week unit, pupils will have built core KS2 money-education competencies through a coherent, scaffolded sequence covering the six topics below.

OVERVIEW Unit overview

This is a complete 6-week unit covering core KS2 money education objectives. Each lesson is self-contained with its own resources, differentiation, and assessment — but designed to build cumulatively over the half-term.

CURRICULUM National Curriculum links

PLAN 6-week breakdown

Week 1
LESSON

Bank accounts explained

Objective: Explain what a bank does and why people use one.

Activity: Role-play: small classroom "bank" with deposit slips.

Assessment: Complete a deposit slip correctly; explain what happens to deposited money.

Week 2
LESSON

Making change

Objective: Calculate change correctly from £1 / £5 / £10.

Activity: Pair-up shopkeeper / customer practice with priced items.

Assessment: Calculate change in 8 scenarios (6 of 8 = secure).

Week 3
LESSON

Comparison shopping

Objective: Compare unit prices to find best value; identify deceptive deals.

Activity: Supermarket flier comparison; "is bigger always cheaper?" investigation.

Assessment: Identify best value in 5 supermarket comparisons.

Week 4
LESSON

Saving for a goal

Objective: Plan how to save for a specific goal; calculate time needed.

Activity: Goal-setting worksheet with weekly contributions and timeline.

Assessment: Build a personal saving plan with calculated timeline.

Week 5
LESSON

Charity and money

Objective: Explain how charities use money; understand giving as a choice.

Activity: Research one UK charity; create a poster about what they do.

Assessment: Complete poster with accurate charity information.

Week 6
LESSON

Online money safety

Objective: Identify common online money scams (fake competitions, in-app purchases, phishing).

Activity: Spot-the-scam game with example screenshots.

Assessment: Identify scams in 6 of 8 example scenarios.

ASSESSMENT End-of-unit assessment

Each lesson includes its own assessment criteria — typically a short task or worksheet at the end of class. We recommend a cumulative end-of-unit assessment quiz: see the matching KS2 unit quiz (where available).

Marking guidance and exemplar answers are provided on each individual lesson page.

RESOURCES Preparation

FREE Free to use, share, and adapt

This unit is free for all UK teachers to use, share, and adapt for non-commercial educational use. Print, distribute, and modify as needed. We ask only that any reproduction credits UK Tax Drag Kids and links back to kids.uktaxdrag.co.uk.

HOME Homework pack

Four activities to consolidate UK income tax mechanics. ~30 minutes.

Band calculation

What pupils do: For each gross salary, calculate the UK income tax (England/Wales/NI 2026/27 rates): (a) £15,000, (b) £30,000, (c) £55,000, (d) £85,000. Show the band split for each.

Expected output: 4 calculations with band-by-band working.

Marking guidance: 2 marks per accurate total (8 marks). Bonus 4 marks for correct band splits.

Personal Allowance research

What pupils do: What is the Personal Allowance? Why does it exist? Who loses it (the taper rule)?

Expected output: A 3-question short-answer response.

Marking guidance: 2 marks per accurate answer. 6 marks total.

Public spending

What pupils do: Find 5 different things UK income tax pays for. Order them by approximate share of government spending (biggest first).

Expected output: A ranked list of 5 spending categories.

Marking guidance: 1 mark per category, 1 mark per correct relative ranking. 8 marks total (e.g. NHS, pensions, education, defence, welfare).

Extension (optional)

What pupils do: Compare England, Scotland, and Wales income tax for someone earning £50,000. Which nation pays the most? Why?

Expected output: A 3-nation comparison table plus 2-sentence explanation.

Marking guidance: Up to 6 marks for accurate research and conclusion (Scotland pays more above ~£28k).

Family discussion prompt (safeguarding-aware)

Ask a working adult: "Name three things you think our tax money pays for." Compare their answers to what you learned in class.

SAFEGUARDING Classroom safeguarding

Note for teachers: Do not ask pupils about their own family's tax band, salary, or income. Frame all examples through fictional salaries. Be aware some pupils may be unsure of family financial circumstances — focus on the public-spending side of the lesson, not personal income.

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