When I was a child, my parents never gave us any pocket money(or “allowance” as we call it in America). They made us work to earn any money we had. They wanted us to know that money is valuable, and that hard work is even more valuable. They wanted us to learn to make wise choices with our money, and they knew we would be more careful with our money if we earned it ourselves. Finally, they wanted us to understand that work and money are related: you cannot have one without the other.
I think there are two things parents need to do to help their children understand the value of money. First, they should make their children earn their spending money, which will make the children consider the money precious. Second, they should not always stop their children from doing foolish things with their money. Making some mistakes will teach the children to be wise.
obtain [?b’tein] vt. 獲得,得到
allowance [?’lau?ns] n. 津貼,零用錢,允許,限額,折扣,允差,考慮
valuable [’vælju?bl] adj. 貴重的,有價值的
related [ri’leitid] adj. 相關(guān)的,有親屬關(guān)系的
understand [.?nd?’stænd] vt. 理解,懂,聽說,獲悉,將 ... 理解為,認為
precious [’pre??s] adj. 寶貴的,珍貴的,矯揉造作的