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February 26, 2009

Chores, The Benefits for Children

Filed under: Children, Chores, Work Ethic, parenting — Chris @ 11:28 pm

Doing household chores teach children responsibility, self-sufficiency, and what it means to be a contributing member of the family.  All of these things are important life skills.

Being Responsible:

Learning to take care of your own things.  Get yourself and your stuff ready for school or activities.  Helping to take care of a pet.  Helping with the laundry. These are all examples of life skills that are important for children to learn.

My 8 yr old can get himself completely ready for his baseball practices.  All parts of his uniform ready and on him.  His bag packed.  His water bottles filled.  Granted, at his age I still do the quick run down with him as we leave the house, mostly because I don’t want to be the one driving like a mad man back from the field to get the missing glove or bat. 

Feeling Like a Contributing Member of the Family:

When children do chores they feel like they are a meaningful part of the family.  Younger children especially love to help with things like emptying the dishwasher, putting laundry in the dryer.  Studies have shown that even older children who complain abut doing chores secretly like it because it makes them feel like they are valuable.

Being Self-Sufficient

Learning life skills that will carry them through the rest of their lives.  I am sure that most of met someone in college who had no idea how to work a washing machine, cook the simplest of foods, or know that the cleaning fairy does not really exist.  I know I don’t want my children to be that person!

February 25, 2009

Taking Care of a Pet

Filed under: Children, Chores, parenting — Chris @ 11:25 am

How many children ask for a pet and promise that they will take care of  it?

“Please, Mom.  I promise that you won’t have to do anything.  Pleeeeeease?” they plead.

And how many parents do you know who have given in, fully expecting that their children will do everything.  And how many parents do you know who are taking care of the pets with no help from the children?

So what do you do when your child is  begging for a pet.  You want to believe them that they will take care of it, but is that realistic?

My mother tells the story of when she was a little girl, her brother had begged for a dog.  Finally he got one and it was his responsibility to feed the dog before he left for school in the morning.  My mother said that their mother (my grandmother) would remind him once every morning by simply saying, ‘Don’t forget to feed the dog!” and left it at that. Seems fairly reasonable to me.  She was a single parent of three children at a time when it was even more difficult than it is today.

The first time he forgot to feed the dog, my grandmother fed the dog.  When he came home from school that day she asked him why he hadn’t fed his dog and he had replied that he was running late and didn’t have time.  She explained to him, who was old enough to know better, that the dog came first.  It had to be taken care of before he left the house.  She told him that the next time the dog would be going to a new home. 

About a week later he again did not feed the dog.  He came home from school and was looking for his dog.  My grandmother asked him if he had eaten his  own breakfast that morning.  Of course was his reply.  She explained that since he had found the time to feed himself and not his dog it showed that he was not yet ready to have the responsibility of taking care of a pet.  She had sent it to a new home.

Now most of us are not willing to actually give a pet away.  We fall in love with the animal as well.

Important questions to consider

1) How much time does your child have to devote to pet care?

If they are at school all day and have out of school commitments that keep them away from the house until late at night and on weekends, not to mention homework, when will they have the time to properly care for a dog?  Some fish might be the better option for this busy child.

2)At their age, how much can they realistically do for their pet?  How much of the responsibility can they handle?  Conversely, how much of the responsibility are you willing to shoulder?

A three or four year old can not be responsible for feeding a pet all on their own, nor can they independently clean a cage or a litter box.  No matter how much they insist that they will.  If you are not willing to do it yourself, you shouldn’t get a pet.

The older a child gets the more they could and should be expected to do.  While younger children should be required to assist you in taking care of the pet, tweens and teens can do the care independently.  This does not mean that they won’t require reminders.  Which leads me to the next question…

3) How responsible has your child proven to be already?

Are you constantly nagging your child to put their shoes away? or do their homework? Are they forgetful? or lazy? Do you want to add one more thing to nag them about?

For a child like this it might be best to have them work on being responsible in other areas of their life before you allow them to take responsibility for a pet.

4)What will happen if they do not take care of the pet?

Are you really willing to get rid of the pet?  If not, maybe you should start with a small pet like a hamster.  They typically only have a 2 year life span. 

February 24, 2009

National Pancake Day!

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chris @ 11:34 am

Remember going to IHOP as a kid?  I loved going there for pancakes.  Somehow they tasted better than any of the pancakes that my mother made at home.  And they would always make the little on top of the pancake stack with whipped cream, maraschino cherries, and pineapple slices.  Oh, and let’s not forget all of the different types of syrups.  Mmmmmmm.

Well, today is National Pancake Day, coinciding nicely with Fat Tuesday, the day before the beginning of Lent.  Shrove Tuesday, as it is also called, was the day that people would traditionally use up all of their eggs, milk, and flour by making pancakes.

Today, all across the country, IHOP is offering a free short stack of pancakes to every customer.  In exchange they are asking that you make a donation to a children’s charity, The Children’s Miracle Network. In doing so, IHOP has raised over 2 million dollars.

Why not go out and get your free short stack of pancakes, make a donation, and thrill your children with an unexpected dinner of IHOP pancakes.  I know where we are going for lunch today!

February 20, 2009

Organized Sports

Filed under: Children, parenting — Chris @ 1:48 pm

My sons have always been involved in organized sports.  I only have one daughter and she is still on the young side.  Also, she seems to have inherited my athletic ability and desire. 

We recently moved across the country and so far we have found that organized sports are a much bigger deal here than they were where we previously lived.  They start them younger and they are tougher on them. 

So far we have had nothing but good things to say about our children’s participation in organized sports.  Sure, we have had a bad coach here and there.  But overall the experience has been a positive one. 

How do you ensure that your children have a good experience?

The number one thing that is to be involved.  Sure not everyone can be the coach, not everyone has the time or the skills necessary for such a job.  But I can assure you that most coaches are dying for parent volunteers to help herd the kids, or handle emails, or organize snacks, there really is something for everyone to do. 

Be realistic about your own child’s skills.  Not every kid can be the pitcher or the quarterback.  Remember that sports are a TEAM effort and everyone has an equal part in making the TEAM successful.  Just because certain positions get all the glory does not mean that they are any more important that any other.  Instill the TEAM spirit in your child. 

If you find that your child is mostly warming the bench, do not approach the coach during the game.  Call him later on the phone and in respectful manner ask what your child can do to improve and get more playing time.  Use “I” statements instead of “you” statements.  If your child is older than 11 or 12, they should be the one doing the asking.  There is always the possibility that the coach does realize how little your child is playing.  Give him/her the benefit of the doubt. 

Work with your child outside of practices to help them improve their skills.  Even if it is just setting up a T in your yard and letting them hit balls off of it or playing catch in the yard.

Leave the game at the field.  Resist the urge to rehash everything or to offer advice on how they might improve next time.  Trust me, you will be tempted in the car on the way home.  Resist.  No good ever comes of it.  I know this from personal experience, unfortunately.

Finally, remember that it is  supposed to be fun.

February 19, 2009

Are Teens Listening to Music Too Loud?

Filed under: Children — Chris @ 11:44 pm

A new study involving iPods and teenagers by the University of Colorado at Boulder and Children’s Hospital Boston says that they just might be. 

It makes me crazy when one of my kids walks into the room and I can hear the music blaring out of their earbuds when they are  still all the way across the room.  The study revealed that teenagers seem NOT to know how loud they are actually listening to their music, which only confirms what my sons say, “What?  It doesn’t seem loud to me!”

The study also showed that teen boys listen louder than teen girls, something that doesn’t surprise me. 

 A 2006 study, indicated a typical person can safely listen to an iPod for 4.6 hours per day at 70 percent volume using stock earphones. But listening to music at full volume for more than five minutes a day using stock earphones increased the risk of hearing loss in a typical person

The good news is  that only a small majority of teens appear to listen to their music regularly at risky levels.

It would be great if iPods and other MP3 players had a visual indicator that displayed when the volume was being played in the risky area, over 70% of the volume.  I would think that if teenagers understood the implications of hearing loss, combined with a visual reminder, that they would be less likely to listen to their music at ear damaging levels.

February 18, 2009

Do You Know More Than Your Pediatrician?

Filed under: Children, Just For Fun, On The Web, parenting — Chris @ 10:28 am

I’ll admit it, sometimes I think I do. Not often. I do often think that I know as much as she does, at least about the common colds, flus, and viruses.

You can test your knowledge with this basic quiz. I scored 17 out of 20, but I think some of the questions were worded in a confusing manner.

I got the one about heating baby formula in a microwave wrong. I thought you weren’t supposed to do that. But I never used formula so I had no knowledge of this.

I was happy to see that they gave co-sleeping with babies an ok. I have always slept with my babies. In fact, the hospital where I delivered most of my kids encourages co-sleeping. When one of my son’s was hospitalized at 6 weeks old the nurse even let him sleep in the fold out bed with me instead of in the tiny baby crib.

I also got the question wrong about the bandages. I almost always make my kids take their bandages off at night so that the wound can “breathe.”

Oh well, I guess my pediatrician’s job is secure. For now.

How did everyone else do?

February 15, 2009

Allowance

Filed under: Allowance — Chris @ 12:33 pm

Do you?  Don’t you?  Is it tied to chores? How much? And what are they expected to do with their money?

These are some of the questions that all parents think about.  And stress over.  We all want to teach our chidlren personal responsibility.  We all want to instill a good work ethic  in our children.  We also want our children to realize that helping out around the house is an expectation.  No one pays me to wash their clothes, so it stands to reason that they should not be paid for cleaning up their own rooms or loading the dishwasher.

President Obama has said that he gives his girls a dollar a week for an allowance.  And that he forgets to give it to them most of time!  Obviously their allowance  is just a token amount.  I doubt they are expected to buy much more than a pack of gum with their money.

They also do not buy their children birthday presents because they feel spending money on a party is enough of a present.  We give our kids the choice… party or present.  So far they have all opted for the presents.

So do you give a monetary allowance?  And how much do you give?

February 14, 2009

Valentine’s Day

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chris @ 12:10 pm

DSC_0359

Every February, millions of cards are sent.  Chocolates in heart shaped boxes consumed. Engagement rings given, or hoped for.  But what is the history of Valentine’s Day?

The History Channel has a great website devoted to Valentine’s Day (they have sites for all of the holidays).  My kids and I read through the pages and were fascinated  by all the trivia.   How is chocolate made?  What is the history of the valentine? Play the game pairing up famous lovers from history!  Fun and educational.

February 12, 2009

Getting Kids to Help With Yard Work

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chris @ 11:01 am

I’ll admit it, I am not a big fan of yard work.  I have friends who love to garden, plant and mulch.  In fact, they think of it as a relaxing, almost meditative, endeavor.  I think they are a wee bit nuts, but to each his own, right?

At my house I view yard work as a necessary evil.  We have to do it for our yard to look nice, but I try to keep it all to a minimum.  And I also require my kids to help.  Just like in the winter when they have to help me clear the snow.

So what can your kids do? More than you probably realize. You just have to remember that doing chores is a learning experience for them. Sometimes having children help means that the job will take twice as long, but it is the process, not the end result that is important. If you start them doing chores young, they won’t know any difference when they are older. And by the time they are teenagers, they will be as efficient as you are. When they chose to be, that is.

Age appropriate chores:

3 to 5 yrs old:

Pick up sticks in the yard
Hold the edges of the tarp down while the older kids rake the leaves and debris onto it
Rake out flower beds, at this age it is all about effort not the end result
Wash front door
Help plant new grass
Help plant flower boxes
Pick ripe produce from garden

6-10 yrs old

Use hand held leaf blower to clear debris off driveway
Rake out flower beds
Sweep off porch
Pull out weeds
Be responsible for watering flower boxes

11 and up

Use larger gas powered leaf blower
Use wheelbarrow to bring sticks and debris to edge of property
Carry tarps filled with raked leaves to the edge of property
Use weed whacker to trim edges of lawn
Mow lawn
Be responsible for watering garden

February 10, 2009

New Birth Order Study

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chris @ 8:59 pm

Newsflash, a new birth order study says that the youngest children in the family get away with everything. 

No?  Really? Who would have thought that?

I can definitely see this  in my own family, though I don’t know that I would say my youngest son gets away with everything so much as I would say that I have learned to pick my battles.  Things that seemed important to me when my oldest son was four, don’t seem as important to me now.

My oldest son will sometimes mention that when he was four years old he wasn’t allowed to stay until 10pm, that he wasn’t allowed to watch commercial television, or he didn’t have x, y, or z.  And I tell him that he is the trailblazer for his siblings after him.  There are good things about being born first and not as good things, but that holds true for whatever position you are born in the birth order.

The study also said that parents expect more from their oldest children.  One of the things that my husband and I marvel at is how when my oldest son was four years old (the current age of my youngest), we felt like he was such a big kid.  My youngest son seems like a baby to us.  And how we treat them accordingly.  We make allowances for the youngest, because he is just a bay-bee.  All of us do, including the older siblings.  It is all in our perception.

But why is any of this important?  According to the study from researchers at Duke University, Johns Hopkins University and the University of Maryland, parents punish older children more harshly — and they’re wise to do so.  The reason?  The younger children in the family learn from the transgressions  of the older.  If they see the oldest sibling punished for doing something wrong, then they will believe that they too will be punished for the same act and will, therefore, be less likely to do it. 

Do you find anything from this study new?  It seems to be the same thing we have all known in our own families for years.

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