Life’s a Chore
September 30, 2008 by Kathy McManus
A new study has identified an emerging domestic threat that could be responsible for making future marriages teeter and prompting a decline in volunteerism and empathy.
The study is about children and chores.
University of Maryland Professor Sandra Hofferth—who is an expert on how children use their time—reports that 6 to 12 year-olds now spend an average of only 24 minutes a day doing household chores. That’s a 12% drop from 1997, and a 25% skid since 1981.
The chore-defying dive reflects “important behavioral and values shifts that will affect lives for years to come,” says Dr. Hofferth.
Doing household chores as a child turns out to be a major predictor of whether an individual does volunteer or community work as an adult, according to sociologists, who note that housework is an important teaching tool. And when it comes to domestic bliss, the distribution of domestic duties—grounded in childhood chores—can make or break a marriage.
According to experts, children’s chores are declining in part because they’re spending more time on reading, studying, and other activities. But even their parental role models are doing less work around the house, hiring help instead or simply letting chores chill.
Within days of the news that chore times had dropped like the Dow, a new website called NannysCircle.com began promoting itself as a novel solution to motivating kids by making a “virtual” game of chores. Instead of nagging Junior to feed the dog, parents log on and send a virtual note, which their child retrieves from his virtual room. In real life, the child supposedly feeds the dog, then emails his parents that the task has been completed.
But success may come at the expense of another domestic chore: parent-child communication. “You see the appeal,” wrote a reporter about the website. “Parenting, a messy series of weary battles that never seem to lead anywhere, becomes something that can be checked off and filed. No back talk. Just hit ‘send.’”
Tell us what you think: Should children be responsible for doing more chores? Are chore-less children really responsible for failed marriages and fewer volunteers? As a responsible parent, would you turn over chore supervision to a computer?
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176 Comments
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October 1, 2008 by Kayla Robinson
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October 5, 2008 by Brooke
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June 10, 2009 by Judy
August 5, 2009 by Gina
September 20, 2010 by Micaela
wow this is something that i would have never thou about in till now..........................
May 17, 2010 by Jenny1981
I think it is getting hard for me with my children doing their chores. They think it take more than one hour to do chores. I think they needed to change their ways o thinking about life.
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June 9, 2010 by Doris Fitch
At what age do you start teaching your kids? My mother had me make my bed and clean my room every morning before breakfast and school. We alternated washing dishes. I think I was 9 when she started but I remember it from early in my child hood. I have done the same with mine. My question is my spouse and I have started a foster home and the kids we get have no idea what a chore is and hygiene had to be taught too. How would you start when the child is 10 and has never even made a bed. The kids we have are high risk too and require a lot of structure and consistency. I find what has worked is a routine, starting with bed time rituals, prayer, lying clothes out for the next day and a linen basket in the room. The room is maintained through out the day and never left dirty at bedtime. Its not perfect yet I find once a week I still have to deep clean the room. There are times that I call a point of no return. That takes most of the day to clean and some.
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July 22, 2010 by Rhonda Walling
I understand your dilemna. My husband and I adopted an almost 7 yr old boy who came from a home with no rules, no responsibilites, no desire to learn them, and it was VERY difficult! He learned to block out uncomfortable situations, and unfortunately carried that through even now, 3 years later. If he is being told to do a chore, the glazed eyes appear and the ears close. If it's not something he WANTS to do, he doesn't hear it! Rewards never helped either. He worked for the reward, but then once he got it, he reverted back to the old behavior. It turned out that he just needed some self motivation that didn't involve mom or dad griping or "nagging" at him to always get busy and do something that we wanted done. We made him a chore chart for every part of his day. Morning Routine, After School Routine, Bed Time Routine, and for the summer we modified it to just include all of the activities we wanted him to accomplish throughout every day. He is responsible for checking it off, and at the end of the day we review it together. He has learned a sense of responsibility, though not always without coaching. Self sufficiency helps the troubled child to feel independent.
October 13, 2010 by sparkie
Are you serious? My step kids never bring home a book and have homework on rare occassion. One is in 8th grade the other 10th. I had homework each and every day including weekends.
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October 1, 2008 by Matthew
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October 1, 2008 by Brandylynn
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July 2, 2009 by Catherine
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October 3, 2008 by Margaret Virtue
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April 29, 2010 by tdfh
OK OK OK.
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October 3, 2008 by James Allard
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October 4, 2008 by Krstafer Pinkerton
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October 8, 2008 by Nicole
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February 24, 2009 by Mark
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January 31, 2011 by Keanusmom
Kids these days have WAAAY less homework than in 1981! It's ridiculous how some of them come home with nothing to do. For single working parents' kids, that gives a child at least 2 hours to laze around... or do chores. There are parents who do not assign chores but go home after working 6-9 hours and do all the housework, complaining the whole time about their lazy ungrateful children! That is madness to me! I was an only child, so I had to do all the chores! With no "rewards" or allowance. My "reward" was dinner, hot water and clothes that fit! lol
But I WILL admit, it was not my mother making me do everything that turned me into an organization/ neat freak- it was going into someone else's home and seeing how they did things and appreciated their homes. When I got my own, I knew how to take care of it.
Kids may not appreciate having to do chores as kids, but when they have their own and see others' homes as adults, they usually take pride in knowing how to keep their places clean.
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October 8, 2008 by G'Ma Margie
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May 2, 2009 by nikki cooper
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January 31, 2011 by Keanusmom
Amen!!
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October 8, 2008 by Jennifer
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October 10, 2008 by shantel bessette
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October 28, 2008 by Brenda D.Koplan
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March 14, 2009 by Linda Montgomery
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November 1, 2008 by Bonnie Bruce
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