By Xander MacKay-Kao
STAFF WRITER
The 2024 Credit For Life Fair was held in the Field House on April 10. Ordinarily, the fair is exclusive to seniors, but this year it included both juniors and seniors in an attempt to transition the fair to a junior event.
The Credit For Life fair is a New England-wide organization formed by several banks. Handled at Andover High School by the Andover Service Club, the intention is to teach students entering adulthood financial literacy to prepare them for the real world. With a gift card raffle reward from the Andover Service Club, students are incentivized to complete various stations with a website that allows them to use a realistic salary with realistic expenditures..
The event is run by Social Studies Program Coordinator Gregory Hurley, who is passionate about the ideals of the fair. He said, “I never had anything like it. A lot of my financial decision-making was trial and error with a good amount of error and a good amount of trial.” He asserts that “school is a place to make mistakes, and make mistakes safely. It’s supposed to be a place where you can take risks and it’s okay because we build in ways to support you and pick you up and say ‘Okay, let’s not do that again.’”
Before Hurley, Assistant Principal Scott Darlington ran the Credit For Life Fair. AHS started the Credit For Life Fair in 2017. When asked his thoughts on it, Darlington said, “I think it’s one of the most important things that we do. It’s the one area that we can guarantee every student that they’re gonna have to deal with, no matter how much money they have.”
The fair’s utilization of an interactive website is relatively new, being introduced during COVID-19 due to the necessity for online functionality. Previously, it was done through clipboards and paper.
This year served to transition the fair to junior year to allow juniors to take further classes in the field in their senior year if it piques their interest. This was done through having the fair invite both juniors and seniors. One junior, Wes Aja, said, “I think that it definitely made me more interested but not enough to take a class on it.” Junior Owen Andrade echoed this opinion. Others like Glafira Kiyko said, “Honestly it wasn’t too interesting, I was just getting stickers for listening. It was hard to understand what was going on and the probability of taking further classes [hadn’t] changed.”
In order to handle the amount of attendees, students were asked to register for their careers ahead of time, fixing a recurring issue of students spending the first 20 minutes of the fair sitting around figuring out what job they want.




