What if the career that finally felt right started with understanding money? Personal Finance Foundations equips you with the mindset, tools, and income strategies to stop reacting to money — and start directing it.
If you're feeling stuck and wondering whether a career in financial services could be for you, this is your entry point — no background required. Three self-paced courses cover what professionals in this field need: how mindset, risk tolerance, and behavioral bias shape financial decisions; how compound interest, budgeting, and balance sheets turn intentions into outcomes; and how income works — from employment and self-employment to investment income, capital gains, and government benefits.
You'll apply concepts through real scenarios and assessments that build genuine, job-relevant knowledge. Research links financial literacy to stronger retirement outcomes and greater wealth accumulation (CFPB) — and you’ll be equipped to help others achieve those results.
Earn a career certificate that you can add to your LinkedIn profile, resume, or CV. Share it on social media and in your performance review. Tap into career resources to support your next move, plus gain the confidence to pursue roles in financial coaching, banking, human resources, or personal financial planning. If you are ready to build skills that open new doors — professionally or personally — this is where you start.
应用的学习项目
Learners will engage in AI-guided Dialogues and immersive Role Plays that bring personal finance concepts to life through realistic scenarios. In the Dialogues, learners discuss financial risk tolerance, time value of money, balance sheet construction, wealth-building strategies, and government safety-net programs with an AI instructor. In the Role Plays, learners meet with a Financial Wellness Coach to confront behavioral biases blocking smart financial decisions and consult a Personal Financial Advisor to explore how unearned income can grow their savings strategically. Together, these activities challenge learners to move beyond memorization — applying financial concepts to their own lives, evaluating trade-offs, and building practical decision-making skills.

















