Posts Tagged ‘teaching manners and chores’
Teaching Your Kids Manners and Chores!
Good manners and chores are crucial to a child’s upbringing. However, it appears that many parents today seem to have let this part of their job description slip with a variety of excuses: “They are just kids,” or “Kids will be kids,” or “My parents were way too strict, I won’t do that to my kids,” or, my personal favorite, “Let them have a childhood, they will have responsibilities soon enough.”
The ramifications of these thought patterns ripple through many levels of the collective life experience, for badly behaved children can be an embarrassing reflection of their parents’ own lack of discipline and consideration for others, creating a domino effect where no one wants to follow rules because, well, no one else is. Kids want and need boundaries, expectations and yes, age appropriate responsibilities to feel that they are making a positive contribution. Self esteem comes from feeling that you are vital part of something greater than yourself.
You can teach manners and proper behavior as well as assign chores to children while respecting their age and their needs. First, you must set up and define suitable expectations based on age and communicate these expectations appropriately. Don’t make a big deal about chores or manners, just remind kids, when necessary, if they are exhibiting an offending or inappropriate behavior.
Encourage and reward them for good behavior, applaud them and comment out loud when they are behaving well (positive reinforcement does work and may fit well into the lifestyles of those suffering from the mindsets described in paragraph one). And be sure to impress upon kids that good manners will serve them throughout their lives while bad manners will only result in having them served up with consequences that become more serious as they grow older.
Below is a list of manners and chores written in an ascending level of age appropriateness, younger kids start at the top, as early as age 2 and by the time you reach age 13 (the bottom of the list) children are capable of handling most anything their parents assign. So if you know an 8 year old or an 11 year old that is not sitting down while eating, or does not know how to match up socks, or does not help put dishes away, then the parent needs to wake up and realize that there are children who are much younger doing these things and thus gaining a huge advantage over the child who has no responsibility. Again, respect of each individual’s needs is imperative and this list and the order in which it is presented are intended as guidelines to get you started. Now, get your own elbows off the table, say please and thank you all day long, and set a good example each day.
BASIC MANNERS
- Respectful and kind to others
- Say Please and Thank You
- Do not talk with mouth full
- Swallow your food before you begin to speak
- Sit down while eating
- Elbows off the table
- Hold a door open for someone
- Do not interrupt another person while they are speaking
- Introduce yourself to others
- Shake hands
- Serve others first
- Let others go before you
IT’S TIME FOR CHORES
2-4 YEAR OLDS SHOULD:
- Help pick up and put away toys and books
- Help dust with socks on hands
- Help wipe up spills and messes
- Put napkins on the table
- Match socks
- Put small items in the garbage
- Fold towels and washcloths
- Help make the bed
- Neatly stack books or magazines
5-6 YEAR OLDS SHOULD DO ALL OF THE ABOVE PLUS:
- Put away toys/books/things
- Empty wastebaskets
- Bring in mail
- Pull weeds
- Sweep outside
- Wipe Counters and sinks
- Put away forks and spoons from dishwasher
- Put laundry in hamper
- Take laundry to the laundry room
- Sort laundry into color piles
- Help put their clothes away
- Help set the table
- Help put dishes in dishwasher
- Help clear table
- Help out in cooking and preparing food
- Help put away groceries
- Help with yard work (rake with child’s rake or plant flowers, etc.)
- Help feed pets
7-9 YEAR OLDS SHOULD DO ALL OF THE ABOVE PLUS:
- Make bed
- Clean room with direction
- Wipe down bathroom toilets, counters, and walls
- “Skate mop” with rags under their feet
- Wash walls
- Help make dinner
- Help wash the car
- Help wash dishes
- Help empty and load the dishwasher
- Put away clean dry dishes
- Rake leaves
- Take out the trash
- Set the table
- Clear the table on own
- Clean the refrigerator
- Help vacuum
- Feed pets
- Fold and put away laundry
- Help carry and put away groceries
10-12 YEAR OLDS SHOULD DO ALL OF THE ABOVE PLUS:
- Clean mirrors
- Wipe and clean light switches
- Put away groceries on own
- Pack their lunch
- Rake leaves and light yard work
- Clean kitchen counters and sink
- Load and empty the dishwasher on own
- Mow lawn and yard work
- Start doing own laundry
- Make small meals on own
- Wash the car
- Clean room without direction
Source: examiner.com




