Rich Dad's Rich Kid, Smart Kid: Giving Your Children a Financial Headstart | Robert T. Kiyosaki, Sharon L. Lechter | Carolyn's "Rich Kid Smart Kid" review
books:
Rich Dad's Rich Ki...
Rich Dad's Rich Kid, Smart Kid: Giving Your Children a Financial Headstart
Robert T. Kiyosaki
,
Sharon L. Lechter
Warner Business
, 2001 - 288 pages
average customer review:
based on 74 reviews
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Shing shing
I am impressed with Mr. Kiwosaki's ability to break it down. I am only seventeen yers old and feel very confident of ,y future know. I know that theres alot i need to learn and experience for me to become
financial
ly secure, but i feel like im on the right path after reading this book. I as well feel glad i read this book because know i can share the knowledge with my
children
and so on. I would of never thought a book would change my life. I see money and markeing in a whole new light.
Carolyn's "Rich Kid Smart Kid" review
"
Rich
Kid
Smart
Kid" by Robert T. Kiyosaki attempts to give parents the skills necessary for providing thier
children
with
financial
freedom. The book is written in three parts. The first concentrates on financial and academic education, the second on steps for parents to take to educate their children, and the third is ways in which parents can find out how to best educate their children.
I found the book informative, but slightly repetitive. I understand there are certain points which he wanted to stress, however, I found myself rereading paragraphs in different chapters.
His description of the different types of genius and his desire for all children to learn according to their strengths was a hopeful message. He provided readers with specific ways in which to help their children gain power over money. The book would be especially helpful to parents of children who struggle in the traditional school subjects.
Overall, as a teenager, I was a bit overwhelmed by the ideas of the book. However, it did provide me with many ways to enhance my perception of money and my ability to have control over it.
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You get it after the third time
Robert really likes to get his point of you can't become
rich
you must be rich to learn to be rich. This book does get some interesting ideas across for example how most students are
smart
but in their own field of interest. I really liked the emphasis on how a child must be pushed to do the best in anything he shows interest in. Robert came back to his favorite game of Monopoly to really explain his point. Robert showed how by playing this game for hours he steered away from his studies a lot, but gained valuable real estate knowledge. Roberts rich
dad
would play Monopoly with Robert in order to push his love for making money and using it wisely. I did however find myself reading the same passages over and over again, Robert seemed to explain ten things just from one lesson he learned, and so he would re-explain the same story over and over again. overall this book did give me a good view on how to manipulate my present to benefit my future. I have also learned many ways to further my current education both in college and in high school.
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A Vague Directory to Financial Success
I truly enjoyed reading another one of the famous
Rich
Dad
books. I am a senior in high school, and I had no clue where to find direction on how to avoid my parents (in debt) footsteps -- that is until I read Rich Dad, Poor Dad. Onto the next guide and more appropriate for my age, Rich
Kid
,
Smart
Kid taught me many valuable lessons, especially about taxes and the banking system. Kiyosaki's
financial
aid also helped me to understand that just because I am not a "numerical genious" doesn't mean I cannot be very successdul in the "real world" creating ideas from my more "genious" skills. The only flaw however, in Rich Kid, Smart Kid, was that it repeated much of what was said in Rich Dad, Poor Dad. As a teenager, I want to know more about how to avoid debt with the government and where money comes and goes. As Kiyosaki says, understanding how money works is the key to financial freedom. Overall, Rich Kid, Smart Kid is a great first step toward success in an ever-changing economy.
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