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18 answers

Taking the trash out, vacuuming, dusting, dishes, & cooking.

Now, just because they are boys doesn't mean that they shouldn't know how to cook & clean. There are a lot of SINGLE men out there that are lucky that restaurants exist cause if they didn't, those men would NEVER get a decent meal!!!

2007-03-15 12:55:35 · answer #1 · answered by ilovepoison2820 5 · 0 0

Make sure they learn to do ALL the chores so they will grow up to be self-sufficient adults. Rotate the chore responsibilites so they don't get bored. Keep them age appropriate. The 12 year old can learn and understand the safety issues of mowing the lawn better than the 8 year old. The 8 year old can certainly dust, vacuum, take out trash. All the boys should be responsible for cleaning their rooms. They are all old enough for that.

2007-03-11 18:31:12 · answer #2 · answered by Beckers 6 · 0 0

Both boys should be responsible for making their beds, the 8 yr old can put his clothes away, feed and water the pet if u have one. The 12 yr. old can start learning to mow the grass, wash the car, clean up his room. Both can take out the trash, run short errands, help carry in groceries from car. Some of these chores may need adult supervision, but it`s a start in the right direction.

2007-03-11 18:39:29 · answer #3 · answered by flamingo 6 · 0 0

think about the jobs the boys have been doing up till now. can you take those and give them more responsibility?
the goal is to raise children to be productive, independent adults. they need to learn to cook, clean a home, wash clothes, take care of a household, and budget. they must also be able to get along with a wide range of people.
sit them down and ask them what they would like to learn and do. include budgeting, volunteer work, planning menus, etc. they might enjoy leading the family discussions, too.

2007-03-11 18:11:56 · answer #4 · answered by KitKat 7 · 0 0

Clean rooms, dust house, rake leaves, take out trash, do dishes, pull weeds in flower beds, vacuum, laundry. Just make sure you give them a common goal to work for with incentives and be fair and consistent with rewords and punishments. Try using a chore chart with each ones daily/weekly chore on it and check them off as they are done so they can see there progress and give them something to work for. You work better knowing you will get a paycheck, right?

2007-03-11 18:39:44 · answer #5 · answered by ibyt2692 3 · 0 0

Dishes, cleaning their room. Almost any thing that you think they can do. It is best if you assign them something that only they are in charge of. That way, if it is not done, they are responsible for it. My brother was doing regular household chores at that age. He didn't always do them, but he was the one that got in trouble if it was not done.

2007-03-11 18:10:53 · answer #6 · answered by Alayna A 2 · 0 0

pick up the trash in the yard, rake, mowe, shovel, etc.
get trash from house on trash day (put it all together in 1 bin)
get household laundry together. do laundry.
vacuum, dust, wash dishes, wash windows (inside) clean the bathtub and sinks.
sweep and mop kitchen and bathrooms.
set the table, clear the table

get a kids' cook book and let him make dinner for you one night a week. he'll love it!!

2007-03-12 01:41:48 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

element first. that's been confirmed especially conclusively that the final public human beings think of in words. This creates an exciting difficulty for people who in no way learn a language of any style. There are not too many examples of this (thankfully), yet feral and abused infants who in no way learn language have thoroughly lost that skill by making use of the age of eighteen. And with it is going one among those different skills. they won't in any respect learn how to any super degree. they have no context or framework to place issues into. And your occasion even much less so. element 2d. long-term sensory deprivation is seen to be one among those TORTURE. Even in a individual who grew to become into thoroughly primary it produces rigidity, hallucinations, melancholy, and delinquent behaviour... a number of that can persist long after the deprivation stops. all of the evidence we've, then, skill that whether the guy you describe have been in a roundabout way waiting to think of, he may be thoroughly barking mad after eighteen years. and not in a good way.

2016-10-18 04:07:48 · answer #8 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

All the stuff other people have suggested are great, but another fun way to teach children responsibility other than doing chores is getting them a pet. They should be responsible for feeding it, walking it...etc.

2007-03-12 02:16:23 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Same ones that can be assigned to girls of the same age...taking out the trash, doing the dishes, sweeping, moping, vacumning, scrubbing the tub and the toilet, dusting, raking leaves/shoveling snow.

2007-03-12 00:36:06 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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