New Peer-to-Peer Program Aims to Boost Studentsā Financial Literacy and Wellness
Image by Ed Brennen
02/04/2019
By Ed Brennen
Luis Diaz knows how challenging it can be to pay for college. A year and a half into his criminal justice degree in 2016, the Milford native had to withdraw from school for financial reasons.
āUnfortunately, I had to leave school for a semester,ā says Diaz, who was able to work his way back thanks to the help of Amy Liss, associate director of Student Activities and Leadership. Diaz secured several scholarships and his employer, Hopkinton Country Club, even held a fundraiser to help him cover expenses.
āI was very lucky,ā says Diaz, who switched majors upon his return and is now a year away from earning a bachelorās degree in music business from the College of Fine Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences.
Drawing on his personal experience, Diaz has found a way to help fellow River Hawks who may be facing a similar situation ā or who may simply need advice about budgeting and saving for a new phone.
As part of the universityās new Money Management Mentors program, Diaz heads up a small team of students trained to answer questions and provide financial literacy resources to peers, either in confidential, one-on-one appointments or to groups, such as a student club or Living-Learning Community.
āMoney can be a scary thing, so we want to provide a safe space for people to talk about these issues,ā says Diaz, whose fellow mentors include juniors Jordan Jones (music studies), Steevens Pierre Tousssaint (civil engineering) and Michael Porter (mechanical engineering).
The mentors, who began offering individual appointments this semester, are part of a broader university initiative, the Money Management Center, spearheaded by Assoc. Dean of Enrollment Joyce McLaughlin to improve studentsā overall financial literacy and wellness.
Under the direction of Liss and Senior Asst. Director Christine Robbins from Financial Aid, the center provides a variety of financial planning programs and resources to students. Its website has tips on budgeting and borrowing, along with an online cost planner where students can get a personalized snapshot of their college expenses based on their specific financial aid, housing and employment situations.
āIām super excited about the program,ā says Liss, who has been working on it with Robbins for more than a year. āIām hopeful that students will have a good experience and share that with other students.ā
While student retention will be one way to measure the programās success, Robbins is focused on another key metric.
āFor me, the bottom line is responsible borrowing,ā she says. āIt would be nice to see a decrease in student loans ā that students realize they donāt need as much as they take.ā
Making Mentors
Mentors, who are hired as work-study students or contract employees, were intentionally chosen to represent a variety of majors so they could better relate to all students.
āResearch continues to show that peer-to-peer conversations around finances are most effective,ā says Liss, who finds that students can be more reluctant to talk to staff members about personal finance issues. āHaving a peer to help feels a little better than coming to any of us.ā
Image by Ed Brennen
Mentors received a two-day training session from Jeanne DāArc Credit Union on basics like budgeting, saving, banking and credit, as well as training from Robbins on financial aid terminology and procedures. They also use resources from , a free online site run by the National Endowment for Financial Education.
āItās important for people our age, in that post-teenage and pre-real-adult phase, to understand their finances,ā Jones, a native of Westminster, says when asked why she became a mentor. āStudents have a lot of different levels of knowledge about their own finances. I have some friends who are already investing and planning their 401(k) plans, and I have some friends that drop money like itās nothing and donāt understand what it means.ā
Tousssaint, a native of Haiti who transferred to UML from Bunker Hill Community College, says students arenāt always aware of the resources available to them.
āEspecially coming from a different country, there were a lot of resources that I didnāt know about at Bunker Hill,ā he says. āI enjoy helping people find them.ā
Taking the Lead
After seeing how Diaz overcame his own financial challenges, Liss knew heād be able to handle the difficult situations of others in a sensitive way ā making him the ideal lead Money Management Mentor.
āYou can teach anybody how to do anything, but Iām never sure if you can teach someone how to care about somebody else,ā Liss says. āAnd Luis really cares about people.ā
āIām never sure if you can teach someone how to care about somebody else. And Luis really cares about people.ā -Amy Liss on Luiz Diaz
Diaz got to work last spring researching similar programs at other universities, putting together a 40-page training manual and holding a few financial literacy sessions at residence halls. Last semester, he spoke about the program at several first-year seminar courses and started a Money Mentors blog, while the team began tabling around campus to spread the word.
Now that the one-on-one sessions are up and running at the Club Hub in University Crossing (students can book an appointment online), Diaz and his fellow mentors look forward to seeing the program grow.
āItās kind of nice taking what I learned and applying it now,ā says Diaz, who also serves as the student representative on the Financial Wellness Committee, which helps shape the universityās 2020 Strategic Plan.
Does he wish the Money Management Mentors would have been around for him a few years ago?
āObviously, it would have been nice to have something like this,ā Diaz says. āBut the way I look at it, if that hadnāt happened, I wouldnāt be where I am right now.ā