BSNS 3150(01) FINANCIAL PLANNING
Three Semester Hours, Fall 2007
Jerrald M. Fox, Ph.D., CFP, Instructor
Office:Hardacre 205
Ph:641-4361
E-mail:jmfox@anderson.edu
Office
hours may vary from week to week. An
appointment sign-up sheet is posted on my office door. I welcome your visits, so come by often to
discuss this course, your future, or anything else of interest to you.
_______________________________________________________________________
Course Description
A
detailed study of family financial planning both for personal benefit and to
assist those pursuing careers in the financial services industry. Topics include career management, budgeting,
tax planning, consumer credit, shopping/buying strategies, insurance planning,
saving and investing, and retirement and estate planning.
Text
Focus on Personal
Finance, Kapoor, Dlabay, Hughes, McGraw-Hill Irwin,
2006. The text comes with a Student
CD-ROM which contains planning tools that will be helpful in preparing for
exams. These tools can also be used to develop
and manage your own financial plans in the years following college.
Supplementary
The Wall Street
Journal,
Money Magazine, Changing Times,
Kiplinger’s Personal Finance Magazine, Consumer Reports and the many
personal finance websites available on the internet. These are great resources for preparing the
two papers required in this course. You
will be required to research these sources each week to locate current
information on the topics we cover in class.
Bring your comments and questions to class and be ready to contribute to
our group discussions. I will randomly
call on each student several times over the semester.
Course Objectives
1. To explore the many financial challenges and
opportunities which you may face both now as a student and on throughout your
adult life.
2. To provide you with information and to help
you develop the skills and confidence to manage your own financial activities
and those of others should you pursue a career in financial services.
3. To challenge you to examine your commitments,
values and goals from eternal perspectives.
To consider what the Bible and the personal guidance of the Holy Spirit
can teach you about God’s plans for your use of all of your abilities and
resources.
Course Requirements
1. Attendance/Participation: To paraphrase
Woody Allen: Ten per cent of success is due to talent and preparation; the
other ninety per cent is due to just showing up on time. I’ll argue with his percentages, but agree
that all of academic success is due to being in class, on time, and prepared to
discuss the topics of the day. I will
regularly take attendance and call on students to lead class discussions. Your final grade will be determined not only
from your exam scores, but also from my subjective evaluations
of your preparation and your individual contributions to the learning
environment of our class. (See the note
under Final Grading below.)
2.
3. Major Financial Event Research Paper: Listed below are four common financial
events. You may work with a classmate and turn in a joint research paper if you
wish. But, choose a partner
carefully. Both students will receive
the same grade regardless of individual contribution. Choose one event from this list:
·
The complete costs of a wedding, reception, and
honeymoon with research of issues, options, choices, and how expenses will be
divided among all parties
·
The complete costs of having a baby and providing
all care for its first year
·
A detailed description of the process and costs of
purchasing your first home including shopping strategies, financing,
inspections, closing costs, etc.
·
A comparison of the costs of buying vs. leasing a
new car for a three year period including shopping strategies, financing,
licensing, insuring, and all regular maintenance necessary to have dependable
transportation
After
choosing your topic, conduct a detailed research study and present your
findings in a report in this required format:
Title Page with
your name, the date submitted, and your topic
I.
Description of the
topic you have chosen with emphasis on the issues you must consider when
you face this event,
II.
Complete listing
of the options available to you for dealing with this event,
III.
Details regarding
both the expenditures required and the opportunity costs
associated with each option listed in part II, and
IV.
A detailed
description of the strategies you would choose to make this event both
satisfying and affordable.
Bibliography of
all sources in MLA format
Your
research base should include resources from printed library materials and current
information found on internet sites. You
must also conduct several personal interviews of financial
professionals and/or others with experience in managing the details of this
event. For example, if you research home
buying you will want to interview realtors, mortgage lenders, and recent home
buyers.
Then,
prepare a typewritten report of your research findings. Your report must reference at the very least three published
resources beyond your text and at
least two personal interviews.
There should, then, be a minimum of five sources listed in your
bibliography. Throughout your report you
must give proper MLA citations for the sources of all facts and
quotations. This is a research
paper. Good research takes time and
effort. Good report writing requires
proofreading, editing, and rewriting.
PLEASE NOTE: You
may submit your research report to the instructor anytime until
4. Three-Year Financial Plan: You will conclude your semester’s study by
personalizing all that you have learned in the form of a detailed financial
plan for your first three years after graduation. A guide sheet with specific requirements is
attached at the end of this syllabus.
PLEASE NOTE: You
may turn in your three-year financial plan anytime until
SPECIAL NOTE FOR
THESE TWO WRITING ASSIGNMENTS: Plagiarism of any form (submitting another's
work as your own) will result in a grade of double-zero as stipulated by the
5. Exams: There will be eight unit exams during the
semester. Exam questions may include
material presented in class discussions, by guest speakers, and from your
textbook. In other words, you must attend every class session and
take good notes both in class and from assigned readings to be prepared to do
well on exams.
The
exams will not be cumulative, but instead will cover in detail the topics of
each unit. The format of each exam will
vary according to the information and skills covered in that unit.
Final Grading
Exams,
8@10% 80%
Research
Paper 10%
Three
Year Plan 10%
*
Instructor's Evaluation +/-5%
*Based upon my subjective evaluations of your
preparation and participation in class as noted in requirement 1 above, I
reserve the right to adjust your final course score by as much as 5% if I
believe it necessary to give an accurate final evaluation of your overall
performance in this course. This will be used in unusual circumstances
only and does not mean that all
grades will be “rounded up” to the next higher grade.
GRADING SCALE
B+ =
87-89.9% C+ = 77-79.9%
A = 93%+ B = 83-86.9% C = 73-76.9% D
= 60 - 69.9%
A-
= 90-92.9% B- = 80-82.9% C- = 70-72.9% F = below 60%
TENTATIVE CLASS
SCHEDULE
Dates Topics Chapter
________________________________________________________________________
September
5 Introduction to course,
materials, and resources
7 Time value of money review Appendix
A
10-14 Personal Financial Planning in
Action 1
17-19 Money Management Skills 2
21 Exam #1
24-28 Tax planning and preparation 3
October
1 Exam #2
3-5 Savings and Payment Services 4
Dates Topics Chapter
________________________________________________________________________
October
8-12 Consumer Credit 5
15 Major Event Research Papers due by 8 a.m.
Review for Exam #3
17 Exam #3
19 Mid-Fall
22-24 Consumer purchasing and legal
protection 6
26-29 The
Finances of Housing 7
31 Exam #4
November
2-7 Home and automobile insurance 8
9 Exam #5
12 Health and disability
insurance 9
14 Life
insurance 10
16 Three-year
financial plans due by 8 a.m.
19 Exam #6
21-25 Thanksgiving
Break
26-30 Investing Basics/Stocks and Bonds 11-12
December
3-5 Investing in mutual funds 13
7 Exam #7
10 Retirement Planning 14
12 Estate Planning 14
14 Review for final exam
17 Exam #8
Monday, 9:30 – 11:10
a.m.
See next page for requirements for Three-Year Financial Plan…
Three
Year Financial Plan
- Outline and Requirements
PLEASE NOTE: You
may turn in your financial plan anytime before 8 a.m. Friday November 16, 2007. None will be accepted late for any reason
whatsoever.
Please
take this project seriously. This is
your roadmap for your life in the near future!
Use the best information from your entire semester of study. Be specific about where you want to go and
create your plan to get there.
Your
grade will be determined by how well you demonstrate what you have learned in
this course, the quality of your personal research, and the clarity of your
writing.
Your paper must
be in the following format:
Section I - General Information
Section II - Financial Goals
First,
discuss the personal commitments upon which your goals will be made. Whom and what do you value most and how will
your plans serve them? Then, discuss
your goals for paying off your debts, housing, transportation, lifestyle,
travel, savings, investments, and anything else you plan to accomplish which
will require the use of money. For
example, do you plan to go to your roommate’s wedding? Rent a tux?
Bring a gift? Plan for it. For each goal discuss the following:
Section III - Monthly Budget for Three Years
Your
budget sheet should have three columns, one for the budgeted monthly dollar
amounts of income and expenses during each year of this three-year plan. (No need for percent, actual and variance
columns.) Assume that your income and expenses
will remain the same throughout each year and only change with the new
year. It should look something like
this:
Monthly
Budget for Chris Student
2008 2009 2010
Projected Inflows
Salary 2000 2200 2500
Investment
income 100 125 200
Projected Outflows
Tithe, Offerings,
Charity
Tithe
to church 210 240 275
AU
Student Scholarships 20 30 40
Emergency Fund and
Savings
Emergency
fund savings 100 150 200
Savings
for auto insurance 110 120 130
Savings
for vacation 50 50 50
Fixed Expenses
Rent 600 625 650
Student
Loans 300 300 300
Etc…..
All
amounts should show your planned monthly
inflows and outflows of cash. All of the
savings and expenditures necessary to meet your goals from Section II should be
included here in expense or goals sections.
The
key? Based upon the expected income from
your career choice, show how you will budget your expenditures and savings to
fulfill your commitments to God, your family, and your goals. You can
accomplish the things you value most if you plan for them and then stick to
your plan.