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2006-12-16 06:12:27 · 6 answers · asked by Gerard C 1 in Family & Relationships Family

6 answers

no chores, no extra's. you help, you get extra things. ie candy,toys, you see where i am going with this?

2006-12-16 09:21:01 · answer #1 · answered by waljac6108 5 · 0 0

It depends on the age of the child. If they're very small, younger than age 2, they're too young to really understand what you want, but you can start by teaching them how to pick up their toys and putting them into larger containers. We used plastic laundry baskets. Make a game out of it, sing songs, and then reward them by reading a story afterward, having some juice, or otherwise spending fun time with them. After age 2 or 3, you can show them how to make their bed (it won't be perfect!), sort colors in the laundry, maybe help you outside by picking up sticks, carrying things for you, etc. The main thing is to show them that they are a part of the family "team" and to include them, so they feel important and they want to help. Once they start school, they can have a small allowance, we started with 25-50 cents a week, so they learn to budget and save, and at that point they can learn to clean their own room, run the vacuum, and so on. You can increase the amount of allowance on each birthday, as well as the number and difficulty of the chores. My boys are teens now and they know how to do yard work, clean the house, cook some simple meals, do their own wash, etc. The oldest has saved up and bought his own ipod and computer system, the younger one is saving for a laptop. So you are also teaching them to be self-sufficient when they leave home, and to keep their own budget.

2006-12-16 06:38:53 · answer #2 · answered by mom of 2 6 · 0 0

You have to find a way to make it fun and make them feel proud for helping. When things are routine and consistent they require less pushing. My son takes his own clothes to the hampers and it is almost like a game because he has to make sure he gets the colors in the right basket, whites, towels and so forth, also if they are really young this would be a good way to help learn colors...as they put them in the basket you repeat what color the piece of clothing is can also count how many pieces there are. Getting him to clean his room is still a battle sometimes, but if I at least help him get started and a lot of the time we put on some music and dance while we clean or sing the Everybody clean up song, he feels accomplished when all his toys are picked up and books and games straightened. I tell him how nice it looks, how great of a job he did then we do something to relax or for fun. When he helps me fold laundry his job is to seperate the socks and try to match them up, he also tosses me a new piece to fold as I am folding the last one, keeps mommy from having to bend over each time, and it gets him to help, plus when he accidently throws too high and a shirt ends up on my face we have a good giggle. He has names for some of his jobs, like he is "sock man" when we do laundry and he is "egg man" when we make breakfast Making them feel good about helping overall will get them to do chores, I let me son help with lots of things, cooking, chores, cleaning my car, working in the yard, they don't seem like work to him because we do them together and make them fun and he feels important and needed.

2006-12-16 06:29:37 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

in case you have a variety of poly dusters on a stick or in basic terms a rag enable the two year previous dirt. the 4 year previous could make advantageous the toys are picked up off the floor, grimy outfits interior the washing room, trash put in the trash cans, shoes prepared. the two year previous could help with maximum of this too yet you will spend extra time telling the two year previous to do it i might think of. the dusting is in simple terms perfect for the two year previous. i'm not asserting the breakables of course. like the coffee table, end tables, television, stuff he/she would be able to attain. do not forget to have them %. up all their toys. 4 year previous could make their beds for them too. i've got have been given a 6 and 3 year previous and that i've got them do chores besides. lol in case you ask them i'm a "recommend mom" yet I make the 6 year previous earn his allowance. Oh! and in case you're doing laundry enable the two year previous push outfits interior the dryer when you have taken them out of the wash. the 4 year previous can seperate.

2016-12-30 12:37:59 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You tell them what you want them to do and if they don't, you punish them. You can try time out until they do the chore. You can take away the t.v. for the rest of the day.

2006-12-16 06:16:13 · answer #5 · answered by mamabear 6 · 0 0

You can't MAKE a little kid to anything. But you can encourage them.

Kids are like adults. They want to feel needed. And they want to be able to do things everyone else can.

So encourage him/her. Show how it's done, and then ask if they can do it, too. Like make their bed. Show how, encouraging and talking with them the entire time to keep their attention. Then the next time ask if they will help. And eventually be there to praise as they make the bed themselves. AND REMEMBER: it will take awhile for them to be able to do it as well as you. You have to be patient, not critical. Praise goes a long way.....

2006-12-16 09:28:39 · answer #6 · answered by garynjanice 2 · 0 1

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