Chores make children successful and happy

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Okay, so I can’t guarantee the promise of happiness, but a recent article titled “Science Says Parents of Successful Kids Have These 13 Things in Common” posted on Tech Insider lists chores as a factor that could lead to parental success. children when they are adults. They quote author Julie Lythcott-Haims (Raising an Adult) that she praises chores because she teaches children that they “have to do life’s work to be a part of life.”

Let’s look at the benefit of chores in a bit more depth (and I’ll lay out my unproven scientific theory as to why it makes kids happy, too).

1. Doing housework increases self-esteem

Self-esteem is confidence in one’s worth and abilities. Young children may not have learned to read and older children may have difficulty with long division or quadratic equations, but most children can learn to make the bed and sweep the floor. Are these worthwhile tasks? Of course they are. And it’s much easier for a child to understand the usefulness of a clean floor than it is to understand where algebra is going to work for them in their lives. Children who feel capable and competent have higher self-esteem. Chores are an area in which most children can develop competencies with relative ease.

2. Doing chores makes kids feel needed.

When we wait on our children hand and foot, it gives children an incorrect estimate of their own importance. Ironically, like praising kids too profusely, doing everything for kids doesn’t develop their sense of importance; rather it leaves children feeling adrift and disconnected. What children want to feel is that they are important because their family needs them. When the character Dill from To Kill a Mockingbird explains to the main character Scout why he runs away from home, Scout wonders, “What would I do if Atticus [her father] she did not feel the need for my presence, help and advice” (143). Scout firmly recognizes her place in her family and knows how essential it is for her to feel needed by them. Contributing to the well-being of the family by doing housework chores is a great way for children to feel like they are an integral cog in the wheel of a smooth family life.

3. Do chores share the work

In previous generations, families had many children precisely because a large workforce was needed just to keep the family farm or business going. As soon as they could walk, the children were assigned simple tasks. In this way, all the tasks of life were accomplished and families prospered. Today, although more tasks are mechanized and there are fewer chores at home, people are also much busier outside the home. With parents working and children going to a jam-packed schedule of extracurricular activities, there is very little time left for the tasks at hand. And yet, “according to a survey conducted by Braun Research in 2014, 82% of adults surveyed said they had regular chores when they were little, but only 28% reported asking their children to do one (12 of July 2015) Wow Instead, imagine a home where the work was shared as evenly as possible among family members The children would appreciate much more what it takes to keep everyone fed and clothed in clean clothes Appreciation is related to happiness!

4. Children who do housework reduce parental stress

With only 28% of children helping out on a regular basis, parents return home after a full day’s work to a night full of homework. Just thinking about it is exhausting. Parents complain that they don’t have time to spend time with their children. But is it because your kids are watching TV or playing video games while your parents are cooking dinner? How about having the kids in the kitchen with you? One child can grate cheese while another cuts vegetables. While children’s hands and attention are busy, it’s a good time to ask deeper, open-ended questions. Homework time becomes connection time, and human connection is one of the most important factors for happiness. One last hidden stress-reducing factor is that parents who aren’t doing the dishes or folding laundry after their kids have gone to bed might just have time to sit next to each other and connect! Connected parents do a better job of supporting their children and making them feel safe.

5. Doing homework teaches kids skills at home that they can use at school

oh? How does doing laundry help to write a clear and well-supported essay? Well, doing laundry teaches responsibility, accountability, planning, attention to detail, and follow through (ever had a bunch of moldy clothes because you forgot to transfer them to the dryer?). Aren’t those all the skills you need to write essays? Of course! And in all kinds of school-related tasks, such as doing homework on time, returning homework, dividing homework into multiple steps, etc. Children who have learned to take on tasks as their own are the same children who are independent learners. They are also excellent team members for group work. They know that many hands do the light work, and they are ready to do their part. They don’t expect anyone else, much less mom or dad, to do the work for them.

And that’s not all!!

So here are four arguments for how chores increase your kids’ happiness and one argument that chores increase their success in school (not to mention later in life). And here’s one more argument: doing chores as kids helps teach kids about work-life balance. Life isn’t just about doing schoolwork, practicing the piano properly, and going to soccer practice. It’s also about creating a healthy living space and cooking nutritious meals that bring the family together. They have long been considered the pillars of a happy home. Oh, and did I mention that children who participate in the kitchen have more varied and nutritious diets? And that children who share washing and cleaning take better care of their clothes and toys? Really, the more I think about it, the longer the list gets.

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