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August 27, 2018 | Alumni

U of T alum's personal finance course for first-year students to triple enrolment to meet demand

By Blake Eligh

“There was a recent survey of high school students that found Canadians don’t know much about personal finance, but it’s really something that everyone needs to be cognizant about,” says Professor Mihkel Tombak (photo by rawpixel via Unsplash)

“These are strategies that have been used in increasing my own net wealth,” says U of T alumnus Mitchell Huynh (BSc 2007 UTM, BCom 2010), who created a personal finance course that is so popular U of T will be tripling enrolment spaces. “What students learn in this course will empower their future financial decisions.” (photo by rawpixel via Unsplash)


A personal finance course aimed at first-year undergraduate students has proven to be so popular that the University of Toronto Mississauga will triple the enrolment for the upcoming academic year.

Launched last year and offered through the department of management, Intro to Personal Finance (MGT130) is the first-ever course offered to students enrolled in all disciplines at the University of Toronto Mississauga. The elective covers the foundations of personal finance, from bank accounts to retirement planning, with tips on developing a good credit history, working with financial institutions and building long-term goals such as property ownership.

Popular demand for the course has prompted U of T Mississauga to triple enrolment – 300 students are registered across four sections in the 2018-2019 academic year, up from 100 students across two sections in 2017. 

“These are strategies that have been used in increasing my own net wealth. What students learn in this course will empower their future financial decisions.”

Management professor and department chair Mihkel Tombak says that the course is invaluable to students who are just beginning their financial lives.

“There was a recent survey of high school students that found Canadians don’t know much about personal finance, but it’s really something that everyone needs to be cognizant about,” says Tombak. “We need to be more financially literate, but it doesn’t need to be mystical. With this course, students can become financially literate and develop a good understanding of how investments work, how to manage their household finances and more.”

The course was developed by alumnus Mitchell Huynh (BSc 2007 UTM, BCom 2010), who taught the inaugural course and will return to the classroom again this year. Huynh earned an undergraduate degree – a double major in biology and math – at U of T Mississauga before realizing his passion for finance, which prompted him to return and earn a second undergraduate degree in commerce and finance. He went on to work in the hedge fund industry and was a financial adviser in the banking sector, but it was while working on his MBA that Huynh studied wealth inequality and decided the best way to help people was to arm them with the knowledge to help themselves.

“These are strategies that have been used in increasing my own net wealth,” says U of T alumnus Mitchell Huynh (BSc 2007 UTM, BCom 2010), who created a personal finance course that is so popular U of T will be tripling enrolment spaces. “What students learn in this course will empower their future financial decisions.”
Mitchell Huynh (BSc 2007 UTM, BCom 2010) created the personal finance course

“Knowledge is the best way to decrease the gap between high and low wealth,” says Huynh (pictured right), who is the director of Experior Financial Group's business owners and high network division. “With knowledge and good advice, the same strategies can be used by anyone.”

In addition to teaching, Huynh offers his expertise as the host of two financial advice television programs, Smart Money and Wise Guys: Finance My Life.

Many students have little prior experience going into the course, Huynh says, so he begins with the basics – how to open a bank account, apply for credit cards and check a personal credit score. From there, the course moves to savings and investment strategies, private lending practices and strategies for investing in rental properties to grow personal wealth.

“These are strategies that have been used in increasing my own net wealth,” he says. “What students learn in this course will empower their future financial decisions.”

Students put their new knowledge into practice with the course’s major assignment, which asks them to create a financial plan for themselves or another person. “This is something that students can apply practically to their own financial future or to help a family member,” Huyhn says. “This is information everyone should know and put into action."

 U of T offers additional courses in investing through the School of Continuing Studies, and a new study of personal finance and student debt by sessional lecturer Radha Maharaj of the Institute of Communication, Culture, Information and Technology. The Elly in Action Competition: Find the Fun in Finance project invites student entrants to engage in the discussion through creative submissions in dance, art or song. It runs from September to March.

 

Republished from U of T News.

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