Excel in Business & Life With This Financial Literacy Course
When you speak with the creators of the Financial Literacy and Business Basics course at New Mexico Community Capital (NMCC), it’s evident that their vision for financial education animates a somewhat daunting subject matter. Indigenous in nature, tech-driven and community-based, their approach is truly unique.
“We wanted it to be engaging, so we use an indigenous pedagogical practice—‘I do, you do, we do.’ I share a story about my business, and the participants apply it to their business or life,” explained Henry Jake Foreman (Absentee Shawnee), program manager of the recently launched Financial Literacy and Business Basics course.
The course works with Pueblos and families to assist them with financial basics and launching their businesses. Supported by a three-year grant from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, the Financial Literacy and Business Basics course includes 15 hours of small group workshops plus 5 hours of one-to-one coaching with mentors. Another perk is a $1,200 stipend for each participant, strategically allocated toward things like a household budget, savings/debt reduction plan, and a two-year money map. “Even a small amount of money is valuable for up-and-coming entrepreneurs and for people living in rural communities,” Foreman said.
In addition to his full-time job with NMCC, Foreman continues to own and operate his nonprofit Cycles of Life and his for-profit subsidiary Karuna Colectiva, which is opening a retail shop in downtown Albuquerque. Foreman recently graduated from the Native Entrepreneur in Residence (NEIR) Program, another powerful program offered through NMCC. (Read Native Business Magazine’s article “‘Native Entrepreneur in Residence’ Cultivates an Ecosystem of Thriving, Indigenous Business Owners.”)
Culturally Relevant Approach
In a somewhat unusual approach for a financial literacy course, Foreman begins each class with an indigenous-inspired meal, recognizing the connection between physical and economic health. One empowers the other. “We saw that health is a huge issue in our communities. We wanted to bring that into our coursework by offering indigenous gourmet food,” prepared with local farmers and entrepreneurs, said Foreman, adding that the course includes free childcare.
Kalika Tallou Davis, founder of Salon Tallou and Foreman’s wife, has assisted with the Financial Literacy and Business Basics course by securing guest speakers. “We’re centered around indigenous foods but also saving and budgeting,” Tallou Davis shared. (Read Native Business Magazine’s article “Kalika Tallou Davis Redefines Beauty and Holistic Business Success.”)
Over dinner, they engage participants in dialogue about uncomfortable topics like money, before immersing them in class, which features a culturally relevant guest speaker. “We call them story circles, where the guest speaker talks about financial literacy, accessing capital and credit,” Foreman shared.
Among the mentors invited to speak has been Dr. Greg Cajete, a Tewa Indian from Santa Clara Pueblo and director of the Native American Studies program at the University of New Mexico. Dr. Cajete has served as a personal mentor to Foreman through the NEIR Program. “He shared about his seven stages of visioning as an alternative to creating a business plan. These stages of visioning can create your reality and you become that vision,” Foreman shared.
When you speak with the creators of the Financial Literacy and Business Basics course at New Mexico Community Capital (NMCC), it’s evident that their vision for financial education animates a somewhat daunting subject matter. Indigenous in nature, tech-driven and community-based, their approach is truly unique.
“We wanted it to be engaging, so we use an indigenous pedagogical practice—‘I do, you do, we do.’ I share a story about my business, and the participants apply it to their business or life,” explained Henry Jake Foreman (Absentee Shawnee), program manager of the recently launched Financial Literacy and Business Basics course.
The course works with Pueblos and families to assist them with financial basics and launching their businesses. Supported by a three-year grant from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, the Financial Literacy and Business Basics course includes 15 hours of small group workshops plus 5 hours of one-to-one coaching with mentors. Another perk is a $1,200 stipend for each participant, strategically allocated toward things like a household budget, savings/debt reduction plan, and a two-year money map. “Even a small amount of money is valuable for up-and-coming entrepreneurs and for people living in rural communities,” Foreman said.
In addition to his full-time job with NMCC, Foreman continues to own and operate his nonprofit Cycles of Life and his for-profit subsidiary Karuna Colectiva, which is opening a retail shop in downtown Albuquerque. Foreman recently graduated from the Native Entrepreneur in Residence (NEIR) Program, another powerful program offered through NMCC. (Read Native Business Magazine’s article “‘Native Entrepreneur in Residence’ Cultivates an Ecosystem of Thriving, Indigenous Business Owners.”)
Culturally Relevant Approach
In a somewhat unusual approach for a financial literacy course, Foreman begins each class with an indigenous-inspired meal, recognizing the connection between physical and economic health. One empowers the other. “We saw that health is a huge issue in our communities. We wanted to bring that into our coursework by offering indigenous gourmet food,” prepared with local farmers and entrepreneurs, said Foreman, adding that the course includes free childcare.
Kalika Tallou Davis, founder of Salon Tallou and Foreman’s wife, has assisted with the Financial Literacy and Business Basics course by securing guest speakers. “We’re centered around indigenous foods but also saving and budgeting,” Tallou Davis shared. (Read Native Business Magazine’s article “Kalika Tallou Davis Redefines Beauty and Holistic Business Success.”)
Over dinner, they engage participants in dialogue about uncomfortable topics like money, before immersing them in class, which features a culturally relevant guest speaker. “We call them story circles, where the guest speaker talks about financial literacy, accessing capital and credit,” Foreman shared.
Among the mentors invited to speak has been Dr. Greg Cajete, a Tewa Indian from Santa Clara Pueblo and director of the Native American Studies program at the University of New Mexico. Dr. Cajete has served as a personal mentor to Foreman through the NEIR Program. “He shared about his seven stages of visioning as an alternative to creating a business plan. These stages of visioning can create your reality and you become that vision,” Foreman shared.
Tech-Driven Approach
Access to technology was a hinge point that made Foreman’s vision feasible.
Foreman—who is skilled at graphic design, planning and project management—calls technology his “bread and butter.” As an educator, he observed that students across New Mexico are trained on Google Chromebooks—which happen to cost roughly $200, a steal for a laptop. “That, in my view, is really incredible, because it allows people to work collaboratively on a document, and you don’t have to buy any new software,” Foreman said.
“The norm is to get workbooks and give them out to everyone,” Foreman said. But the norm wouldn’t cut it for his course. “We wanted to go with the Google Digital Suite, and it just so happened that Google put out a free curriculum called the Google Digital Skills Curriculum. It teaches you by video how to put together a budget, how to put together a business plan, how to put together a debt reduction calculator. I told Peter [Holter] that we have to include this in our program. After the program ends, our students will still have the computer and access to all of this information and knowledge for free,” Foreman said.
Community-Based Approach
About 8,000 Native-owned businesses operate in New Mexico. Five percent of those businesses have employees. The rest are sole proprietorship. NMCC courses offer a vital sense of interactivity, not to mention professional development. Google Chromebooks invite ongoing community interaction, allowing a community to build online in addition to locally, Holter said.
Participants are not joining the Financial Literacy and Business Basics course, or any NMCC programs, passively, Holter underscored. There are actively engaged and committed to the process of personal evolution and business development. “There is a real heavy engagement,” he said. “The [Kellogg] grant calls for 16 families of a certain income and other requirements. At this last version of the cohort, there were over 30 people in the room, and they were engaged. They were using the tools that we gave them very effectively and sharing in ways that were pretty unique. What we’re looking to do is help people identify a community project where they can get together and put these tools to work. There’s an important community thing that happens after we leave. It’s a process.”
NMCC is currently weighing how to measure its true impact and value. “What we’ve noticed in Financial Literacy and Business Basics is that we’re starting to trigger more indigenous tribal economies,” Holter said. “We’re seeing bartering happen within our class. We’re looking at new ways to create these economies that may not just be based on cash or transactions but based on relationships and the building of these local tribal economies.”
Inspired by the collaborative nature cultivated through NMCC programs and courses, Native entrepreneurs “feed each other in all kinds of ways. It’s great to see how this thing is emerging,” Holter said. “People are coming together and realizing that they are not alone, and that they have a dream, and the dream can be fulfilled.”