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HB203 • 2025

AN ACT TO AMEND TITLE 14 OF THE DELAWARE CODE RELATING TO THE EQUITY AND INCLUSION IN FINANCIAL LITERACY FOR ALL HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS IN DELAWARE ACT.

AN ACT TO AMEND TITLE 14 OF THE DELAWARE CODE RELATING TO THE EQUITY AND INCLUSION IN FINANCIAL LITERACY FOR ALL HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS IN DELAWARE ACT.

Education
Enacted

This bill passed the Legislature and reached final enactment based on the latest official action.

Sponsor
Hilovsky
Last action
2025-09-19
Official status
Lieu/Substituted 6/10/25
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The official source material does not provide specific details on how partnerships will be established or funded.

Financial Literacy Requirement for Delaware High School Students

This act mandates that all Delaware high schools offer a half-credit course in financial literacy, which will be required for graduation starting with the class of 2027.

What This Bill Does

  • Requires Delaware high schools to provide at least a half-credit course on financial literacy.
  • Makes successful completion of this course necessary for students entering grade 9 in the 2026-2027 academic year and beyond to graduate from high school.
  • Includes instruction that meets the financial literacy standards set by the Department of Education.

Who It Names or Affects

  • High school students in Delaware starting from grade 9 in the 2026-2027 academic year.
  • School districts and charter schools that serve high school students.

Terms To Know

Charter School
A public school established under specific laws in Delaware.
Department of Education (DOE)
The state agency responsible for overseeing education policies and standards.

Limits and Unknowns

  • It is not clear how the financial literacy course will be integrated into existing social studies curricula.
  • There are no details on how partnerships with private or public enterprises will be established or funded.
  • The specific certification requirements for teachers to teach financial literacy courses have yet to be determined.

Amendments

These notes stay tied to the official amendment files and metadata from the legislature.

HA 1

1 • Hilovsky

PWB 6/5/25

Plain English: The amendment changes the requirement for high school students in Delaware from a financial literacy course to a half-credit towards their graduation requirements.

  • Changes 'course' on line 36 of HB203 to '1/2 credit'.
  • Removes 'course' on line 43 of HB203.
  • The amendment does not provide details about what constitutes a half-credit or how it will be implemented in schools.

Bill History

  1. 2025-09-19 Delaware General Assembly

    HS 1 for HB 203 - Signed by Governor

  2. 2025-06-26 Delaware General Assembly

    HS 1 for HB 203 - Passed By House. Votes: 39 YES 1 ABSENT 1 VACANT

  3. 2025-06-25 Delaware General Assembly

    HS 1 for HB 203 - - Passed By Senate. Votes: 21 YES

  4. 2025-06-25 Delaware General Assembly

    HS 1 for HB 203 - Passed By Senate. Votes: 20 YES 1 NOT VOTING

  5. 2025-06-24 Delaware General Assembly

    HS 1 for HB 203 - Reported Out of Committee (Education) in Senate with 1 Favorable, 4 On Its Merits

  6. 2025-06-24 Delaware General Assembly

    Substituted in House by HS 1 for HB 203

  7. 2025-06-12 Delaware General Assembly

    HS 1 for HB 203 - Passed By House. Votes: 40 YES 1 ABSENT

  8. 2025-06-12 Delaware General Assembly

    HS 1 for HB 203 - Assigned to Education Committee in Senate

  9. 2025-06-11 Delaware General Assembly

    HS 1 for HB 203 - Reported Out of Committee (Education) in House with 3 Favorable, 9 On Its Merits

  10. 2025-06-10 Delaware General Assembly

    Substituted in House by HS 1 for HB 203

  11. 2025-06-05 Delaware General Assembly

    Amendment HA 1 to HB 203 - Introduced and Placed With Bill

  12. 2025-05-20 Delaware General Assembly

    Introduced and Assigned to Education Committee in House

Official Summary Text

AN ACT TO AMEND TITLE 14 OF THE DELAWARE CODE RELATING TO THE EQUITY AND INCLUSION IN FINANCIAL LITERACY FOR ALL HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS IN DELAWARE ACT.
With 60% of U.S. households living paycheck to paycheck, 40% of Americans having less than $300 in savings, 33% of Americans having saved nothing for retirement, 95% of Americans having not saved enough for retirement, and 87% of American teens admitting not understanding their finances, financial literacy education in Delaware high schools is needed.
This Act, which may be cited as “The Equity and Inclusion in Financial Literacy for All High School Students in Delaware Act”, requires high schools to provide, at a minimum, a 1/2 credit course on financial literacy. And, beginning with students entering grade 9 in the 2026 through 2027 school year, successful completion of the course will be required to obtain a high school diploma. This Act requires the course to include instruction which meets the financial literacy standards for high school students adopted by the Department of Education.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
Legislation Document

SPONSOR:

Rep. Hilovsky & Rep. Collins & Rep. Dukes & Rep. Hensley & Rep. Jones Giltner & Rep. Postles & Rep. Shupe & Rep. Kamela Smith & Rep. Michael Smith & Rep. K. Williams & Sen. Hoffner & Sen. Huxtable

Reps. Gray, D. Short, Yearick; Sens. Hocker, Mantzavinos, Wilson

HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

153rd GENERAL ASSEMBLY

HOUSE BILL NO. 203

AN ACT TO AMEND TITLE 14 OF THE DELAWARE CODE RELATING TO THE EQUITY AND INCLUSION IN FINANCIAL LITERACY FOR ALL HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS IN DELAWARE ACT.

WHEREAS, financial literacy is a necessary skill set to enable all students to reach their full potential in life regardless of zip code; and

WHEREAS, financial literacy education elevates the financial situation and opportunities of individuals, families, and communities; and

WHEREAS, financial literacy coursework and knowledge has measurable impacts on future success in life for all participants; and

WHEREAS, an independent 2024 study by think tank Tyton Partners reports that a ½ credit financial literacy course in Delaware adds an estimated $116,000 lifetime benefit to each student; and

WHEREAS, not requiring financial literacy education for all graduating high school students in this State will result in delaying or reducing lifelong success in achieving personal aspirations and lifelong goals; and

WHEREAS, in 2020, the NAACP passed a resolution to advocate for financial literacy education in schools, stating “present and future financial sustainability of a financially strong Black community is dependent on African-Americans becoming more financially literate today so that tomorrow the African-American community will have a fighting chance to close the ever widening financial literacy equity gap that has always existed between Whites and Blacks in America”; and

WHEREAS, data from the FINRA Foundation’s National Financial Capability Study, spanning 12 years from 2009 to 2021, indicates only 24% of the Hispanic population are rated as financially literate and only 14% of those in the 18 to 34 age group are financially literate. Overall, Hispanic women are only 14% financially literate and only 32% of Hispanic males are financially literate; and

WHEREAS, according to a Social Security Administration report, Native Americans recorded the lowest average financial literacy scores in all age groups when compared to other demographic groups; and

WHEREAS, the NAACP resolution, the FINRA Foundation’s study, and the Social Security Administration report highlight the need to provide this necessary life skill to all high school students of all races; and

WHEREAS, a public better educated in personal financial literacy will serve the greater good and enhance the workforce, competitiveness, and economic development of this State; and

WHEREAS, the State of Delaware previously adopted Financial Literacy Content Standards as separate and distinct from Social Studies Standards and content areas; and

WHEREAS, instruction aligned to Financial Literacy Content Standards is distinct from and is not a replacement for instruction aligned to Economics or other social studies content area standards; and

WHEREAS, national education organizations, including the National Council for the Social Studies, include financial literacy as a part of a comprehensive social studies program and consider it an important course for students.

NOW, THEREFORE:

BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE:

Section 1. Amend Subchapter I, Chapter 41, Title 14 of the Delaware Code by making deletions as shown by strike through and insertions as shown by underline as follows:

§ 4150. Financial literacy education as a required course.

(a) For purposes of this section

:

(1) “Charter school” means a public school established under Chapter 5 of this title.

(2) “Department or DOE” means the Department of Education.

(3) “School district” means a clearly defined geographic subdivision of this State organized for the purpose of administering public education in that area and includes a district specifically created to administer a system of vocational or technical education.

(b) A school district or charter school serving high school students shall provide, at a minimum, a 1/2 credit course on financial literacy.

(1) A standards-aligned curriculum with high rigorous instructional materials that includes assessments.

(2) Opportunities for high-quality initial and ongoing professional learning made available to teachers by the local education agency.

(c)

Beginning with students entering grade 9 in the 2026 through 2027 school year, students must successfully complete a ½ credit in Financial Literacy as part of the Social Studies

credits

required

to

receive

a

high

school

diploma

issued

under

§152(a)

of

this

title.

(d) School districts and charter schools are encouraged to partner with private or public enterprises or individuals to add value to the student experience in the course required under

subsection

(b)

of

this

section.

These

partnerships

may

include

serving

as

expert

class presenters on financial literacy topics,

sponsoring

student

competitions,

awarding scholarships

for

outstanding

achievements,

and

sponsoring

or

providing

teacher

professional development, or serving as expert presenters in the course.

(e) The

Department,

with

the

approval

of

the

State

Board

of

Education,

shall

adopt

or update regulations to implement this legislation in accordance with the following:

(1) The

current

Financial

Literacy

Standards

shall

be

now

included

as

a

part

of Social Studies Standards.

(2) Financial

Literacy

shall

be

considered

as

a

content

area

within

Social

Studies.

Section 2. The Department of Education and the Professional Standards Board shall determine the certification necessary to qualify an educator to provide the credit required under Section 1 of this Act.

Section 3. This Act may be cited as “The Equity and Inclusion in Financial Literacy for All High School Students in Delaware Act.”.

SYNOPSIS

With 60% of U.S. households living paycheck to paycheck, 40% of Americans having less than $300 in savings, 33% of Americans having saved nothing for retirement, 95% of Americans having not saved enough for retirement, and 87% of American teens admitting not understanding their finances, financial literacy education in Delaware high schools is needed.

This Act, which may be cited as “The Equity and Inclusion in Financial Literacy for All High School Students in Delaware Act”, requires high schools to provide, at a minimum, a 1/2 credit course on financial literacy. And, beginning with students entering grade 9 in the 2026 through 2027 school year, successful completion of the course will be required to obtain a high school diploma. This Act requires the course to include instruction which meets the financial literacy standards for high school students adopted by the Department of Education.