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Independance- Age Ideas. Age Appropriate Chores for Children - Best Chores for Kids and Teens. Best Chores for Kids and Teens The best chores for children are those that they can do, and do well.

Age Appropriate Chores for Children - Best Chores for Kids and Teens

Or in other words, the chores that work best are age appropriate chores. When deciding what chores to assign to your child, you should not only just consider what needs to be done around the house but you should also focus on the positive aspects of chores. Among other things, these include building self-esteem and contributing to the family. Setting age appropriate chores means that you can't give a 5 year-old the chore of mowing the lawn (just be patient - they grow up fast). You need to match the chores to the kids. Age Appropriate Chores for Toddlers - Ages 2-3 Surprise! Picking up and putting away toys Dressing themselves and putting dirty clothes in hamper Helping clean up spills (there should be plenty of opportunities for this one) Dusting (best done with a microfiber cloth or a Swiffer duster) Clutter Jail Tool. Whining: 10 Ways to Get Your Kids to Stop Whining. iMOM » Tikes » Parenting » Training » Whining: 10 Ways to Get Your Kids to Stop Whining 1.

Whining: 10 Ways to Get Your Kids to Stop Whining

Ignore them. The vast majority of parents polled on this subject all say that ignoring a whining child is a great technique. This tends to come easier for women than it does for men. However, ignoring a whining child will eventually teach them that it gets them nowhere. 2. When your child begins to whine, simply leave the room. 3. When it happens that your child is whining about a particular item, simply remove access to that item. 4.

A father notes, "I tell them I don't understand whinese. 5. In cases of young children, the Time Out works for many different issues. 6. Men tend to have very low tolerance for whining. 7. A parent notes, "With my 3 year-old, changing the subject has an 85% success rate. 8. If your child receives an allowance, this is an outstanding technique. "Is your class always this loud?" I don't know how many times I have heard this from substitute and special area teachers, but it has definitely been too many!

"Is your class always this loud?"

And I am determined to win this battle! So, where do you go when you need ideas? Pinterest, of course! Ten alternatives to time-outs. As parents begin to seek a more gentle method of discipline, they often start by dropping the obvious punishments, such as spanking or removal of unrelated privileges.

Ten alternatives to time-outs

Finding themselves without tools to enforce their instructions, they begin to rely heavily on traditional time-outs in place of their former punishments. The traditional form of time-out involves sending a child to a particular spot (their bedroom, a "naughty chair", the corner, etc) for a particular length of time (often one minute per year of age) in order to "think about what they've done. " For most children, however, the time is spent in anger, stewing over the apparent injustice of their punishment. When used arbitrarily or too often, it prevents the child from understanding the true consequences of their action and fails to get to the root of the behaviour. DIY Time Out Stool. Discipline – Enforcing Consequences. It’s time once again for Heather from Family Volley to share with us some Parenting Tips as part of her “Parenting Tips” here on The Idea Room.

Discipline – Enforcing Consequences

I realize that today is a Wednesday and usually Heather’s series runs every other Thursday here on The Idea Room. I had to make a little rearrangement this week so you get her a day early! Here’s Heather in her own words… –Amy 2K+Parenting is hard. Although there isn’t a cookie cutter consequence for every situation or misstep, there are some important guidelines that will really help us as parents.

The most important thing to remember…Don’t EVER, EVER withhold love as a consequence. Other important suggestions… Make it clear before the misbehavior happens, that there are consequences for bad behavior. Now that we have some general suggestions, here are three specific things that can be done when you need a consequence. 1. Take a minute or two and think about each of your children. For our son, it is television time. The key is to be CONSISTENT!