If you are receiving unsolicited phone calls from an entity pretending to be ACCC (a trusted non-profit credit counseling agency), please be assured that ACCC’s policy is NEVER to contact you unless you’ve explicitly requested us to call you. Also be cautious of emails from an unusual or unfamiliar domain. ACCC’s domain extension is @consumercredit.com, and any emails using a different extension should be treated with suspicion.

×

ACCC’s Client Login allows current clients to access their program information, including the due date, program benefits, and other documents.

Select a Client Login below based on the service that you are currently enrolled in:

Debt Management Program

Client Login

Not yet a client, but looking to get started?

ACCC offers debt relief options to individuals and families that are suffering from stress related to credit card debt by providing effective credit counseling, helping to consolidate debt, and advising on debt management.

Get Started

Wait!

You are now leaving the Consumer Credit website and are going to a website that is not operated by ACCC. We are not responsible for the content or availability of linked sites.

Are you sure you want to leave?

No, return me to the previous page.

Yes

Resources & Tools

Educating Kids On The Basics Of Money Management

If you like our content, make sure to subscribe to our channel! 

Children start learning about money long before their first savings account, job or credit card. Begin the conversation even before they’re in school by talking about work and money. Everyday activities are teachable moments.

What should each age group focus on?

  1. Preschool: focus on identifying different types of coins and counting and sorting them
  2. Kindergarten: focus on how much each coin is worth while drawing equivalencies between difference coins (ex. 5 pennies makes 1 nickel)
  3. First & Second Grade: Focus on how to use the fewest amount of coins to get to certain amounts, and whether or not the child has enough money to buy different items at different prices. Also, introduce how to make change

What are the key lessons?

  1. Money is exchanged for goods and services
  2. Buying something means exchanging money for it
  3. The amount of money needed to buy something is called the price
  4. Different goods and services have different prices
  5. Some things are free and don’t cost money
  6. If you don’t have enough money to buy something you can either save up to buy it another time or buy something else

Money is an exchange for something you need or want. Children see money exchanged but don’t fully understand the value money holds on life’s necessities.

creditU

Your Ultimate Money Management App

Meet CreditU, the ultimate one-stop debt and financial management app! See your full financial overview, including debts, income, expenses, and savings.

CreditU Apple App Store
Dev Tool:

Request: debt-resources-tools/videos/informational-videos/educating-kids-on-the-basics-of-money-management
Matched Rewrite Rule: debt-resources-tools/([^/]+)/([^/]+)/([^/]+)/?$
Matched Rewrite Query: debt_resources_category=videos/informational-videos&debt-resources=educating-kids-on-the-basics-of-money-management
Loaded Template: single-debt-resources.php