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Letting Kids Know Their Work Is Valued

Kids can definitely tell when their work is a necessary and valuable contribution to the family. Keeping this in mind may make assigning family chores a bit less, well, a bit less of a chore.

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“Honey,” I called yesterday morning, “I need your help moving that mattress before your cousin comes so he can have a place to sleep.”

“Ok,” my 5-year-old said eagerly and hopped downstairs two-at-a-time to help.

This was a far cry from the reaction I had gotten the night before when I repeatedly reminded her it was time to set the dinner table, or last week when she’d lain across the floor resisting cleanup time.

So what was the difference?

Well, for one thing, she knew that I couldn’t move the mattress on my own. Also, she was excited to have her cousin come for a visit and was probably pretty proud that a grown-up needed her help so much. I don’t think I could say the same for the mundane request to set the table…again.

It reminds me of a conversation I had with a friend after a recent trip I took with both my girls, aged 2 and 5. I’d marveled at how capable and helpful my eldest had been: getting the bags off the luggage carousel, handling the stroller for huge stretches of airport terminal while I pushed the cart with the bags. “She really stepped it up to a new level,” I told her.

My wise friend, a gifted mother and teacher, had nodded knowingly. “Kids can definitely tell when their work is a necessary and valuable contribution to the family,” she said.

It’s true. My daughter knew that if she didn’t help at the airport, we might not get our belongings, might never make it to our rental car and final destination. But she’s a very smart cookie. She can certainly tell the difference between “I’m asking you to do this because it’s for your own good—I’m trying to teach you how to behave properly,” and, “I need you to do this because we have a real need here and your work really matters!”

Keeping family work both regular and routine can certainly help encourage co-operation. But even so, it can be hard to get kids to pitch in sometimes, especially if they’re of a certain hard-headed variety, determined to prove their ability to forge their own path (gee, I don’t know anyone like that in my family!)

But I’m thinking that there are ways I could do a better job of how I frame it all. If I can show with tone, content, and action that the work required of them truly needs to be done, and isn’t a frivolous request meant as a lesson, I believe that my eldest—or any child for that matter—would really respond better.

There’s no blueprint for this kind of approach. It isn’t really a matter of a script, but more a mindset, a starting place from which I’d like to come. So, for example, if she needs to set the table, I may say, “Dinner will be ready in five minutes, all we need is for you to set the table now so we can eat.” Or if it’s cleanup time in the playroom, I might remind her that, “I can’t sweep up the floor if the toys aren’t picked up, and it’s getting pretty dusty in here! Have you tried walking around with bare feet?” Then, when something is done particularly well I can comment on the desired effect it will produce. As in, “Wow it’s so organized in here we’ll have no trouble at all finding what we need right away next time we play here.”

To some, perhaps this approach seems like coddling, like catering to a child who should just do what they’re told or face punishment. I understand. There can be a place for swift obedience or else. But helping kids see the intrinsically motivated reason to follow your rules makes it far easier for them to internalize doing the right thing for the right reasons. In this way, I hope, they can learn to be the person I’d want them to be, even when no one’s looking.

Besides, in my experience, power struggles beget more power struggles until that becomes the only way a family knows how to do things. I’d rather pick my battles, so to speak, so that conflict is more of the exception than the norm. I hope that remembering that the work I ask my kids to do is both needed and valued will help keep the peace, that this peace will bring more peace, and so forth. Because the rest of the world is filled with enough strife, shouldn’t home be a safe harbor, a place where peace is the norm, and battles the surprise? Well, at least we can try.

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Steven Bartholow (Editor) May 16, 2013 at 03:53 pm
Thanks for posting this. I also added this to our events list. In the future I suggest posting anRead More announcement and event for maximum exposure- http://santee.patch.com/posts/event/new Good luck with the fundraiser!
RainWaterSystems May 17, 2013 at 10:58 am
That's awesome! We wish you success and recovery. We suggest two books; A Purpose Driven Life byRead More Rick Warren and Think and Grow Rich by Napolean Hill. I hope to be in a position to hire a salesman this fall.
Steven Bartholow (Editor) May 16, 2013 at 10:34 am
Anyone else recommend a Santee family owned business that's outside the city?
Steven Bartholow (Editor) May 20, 2013 at 02:31 pm
Search for "Quail Brush" in the search bar in the top right corner.Read More http://santee.patch.com/search?keywords=Quail+Brush
Retha Knight May 17, 2013 at 11:05 pm
Where do you type what you want to view, like "Quail Brush"?
Steven Bartholow (Editor) May 17, 2013 at 10:01 am
No drop down menus, just click the header links for more options. For story categories click newsRead More and look on the left hand column. I know the redesign will take a bit to get used to, but I really think it will be a better site for community engagement, and easier to use. Feel free to post your feedback to the redesign on the boards, I'll check it out and respond, but you might also send your feedback straight to Patch headquarters with this form- http://feedback.aol.com/rs/rs.php?sid=patch Engineers will be furiously tweeking the new site based on your suggestions.
Mike Walker April 23, 2013 at 01:20 pm
this is why the battlefield has changed temporarily from the political arena to the Energy Arena.Read More Co Gen Tricks and the usual suspects are making their big money bet on two inevitable facts that will force the hand of the CPUC and CEC to place a new gas power plant somewhere in the area. 1) the Electric Vehicle Mandate. 2) voltage support (power factor) needed by the industrial wind and solar farms in the desert. There is more to what meets the eye with the aggressive push by the usual suspects to cover our open spaces in the East County with these poorly sited RE projects. More wind and solar farms means more gas power plants. There is only one way to fight the destruction of our open spaces, and that is with roof top solar, conservation, energy efficiency and community owned energy districts. The fisrt thing that needs to be done is the City of Santee exempt residential scale PV installs from needing a building permit. Australia, Germany and the State of Vermont do not require a Building Permit to install PV.
Retha Knight April 23, 2013 at 03:48 am
Well said Stephen! Knowledge is TRULY power! The fight is not over! Cogentrix is just onceRead More again playing their wait, wait, wait game in the public eye and playing their lobbying game behind closed doors.
just my opinion April 22, 2013 at 01:04 am
Stephen, well said!!!!!