Teaching Kids About Responsibility is About More than Just Chores
Don’t equate obedience with responsibility
There is a significant difference between obedience and responsibility. If your child does the dishes because you told him to, you’re not teaching him to be responsible…you’re teaching him to obey a direct order. I’m not saying that’s a bad thing. Even the most permissive or gentle parents expect their kids to follow certain orders.
Make chores about helping others, not following orders
If you just hand your kids a chore chart and say, “It’s your job to complete all of these tasks each week,” we’re basically back to simply raising obedient kids. They’ll do it because you said so, end of the story.
Instead, take the time to explain to your kids why everyone has to do chores. Help them see how their contribution helps the entire family. How when you all work together- when you all take responsibility for the things that need to be done- everyone has more time for the more enjoyable things in life.
Tell them honestly, “Mommy works all day. When I get home, my feet really hurt and I’m so tired. When you take out the trash and wash the dishes for me, it helps me so much because I can sit and take some pressure off my feet.” Knowing that they’re helping you in a very real way shows them that being responsible is something to be proud of.
Teach them how to do things for themselves…and actually LET them do it
A big part of teaching responsibility to our kids means taking a step back and letting them learn how to do things for themselves. Sometimes, that’s easier said than done. We see our kids struggling to do something, so we step in and do it for them.
Worse, we want a chore done a specific way, so we hover, bark orders, and “tsk” at them the entire time. Ultimately, they feel like they can’t do it to your satisfaction, so they don’t even bother trying. Or they’ll do the bare minimum because they know that you’ll redo it after them anyway.
It’s not enough to teach kids to do things for themselves. We have to actually stay out of their way and LET them do it, even if it means that it’s not exactly done the way we’d do it. Oh, and if you do have to redo it after them, at least wait until they’re not around.
Now, if you find that your kids are doing a cruddy job with a specific chore on purpose, then you can step in and say, “I know what you’re doing here and it’s not going to fly. If you choose to do it the wrong way, you’ll have to do it again.” That teaches them that responsibility isn’t just doing something…it’s doing it right.
Let them to work for what they want
I have two ways of thinking when it comes to paying kids for doing chores. On the one hand, I feel like it’s a good way to teach them the value of hard work and about what to expect in the real world. We do X, we get paid $Y.
On the other hand, though, I think it’s important that everyone in the family has unpaid chores. Remember, the biggest lesson our kids should learn from these tasks is that families have a responsibility to help each other.
Besides, in the real world, no one pays mom to wash the dishes or do the laundry. Just like there’s a difference between obedience and responsibility, there’s a difference between responsibility and a job. Yes, working is part of being responsible, but like chores, it’s really only a small part of it.
There are so many things that we have to do that no one pays us for that are just part of being a responsible adult and taking care of ourselves. Like washing our dishes or doing our laundry, for example.
But then we’re back to the first hand. We want to teach our kids the value of hard work- and part of that is teaching them the MONETARY value of it. We don’t want to just hand them everything they want on a silver platter. Instead, we want them to EARN it.
Teach kids the difference between a responsibility and a job
So, here’s what I propose we do instead. First, start each week by dividing up the chores that MUST be done, like cleaning tasks. No one gets paid for these things because they’re family obligations.
Then, make a list of extra tasks. Things that don’t need to be done, but that it would be nice to have done, or things that should be done at some point. In other words, necessary but not urgent. Like cleaning out the garage, gathering too-small clothes for the donation bin, and so on.
Next, assign a fair monetary value to these tasks based on the amount of labor involved. For example, cleaning the garage would earn more than gathering up clothes to donate because it’s more difficult and time-consuming. Outline your expectations for the task, too. If you’ll only pay out once the entire garage is sparkling-clean and organized, make that clear upfront.
Then, tell your kids that at some point each of these tasks will be assigned as unpaid chores (because they really DO have to get done sometime). For now, though, they’re voluntary and paid. Your kids can choose which they want to do and receive a fair wage for doing them, which they can use to pay for the things that they want.
Bottom line, completing a list of chores isn’t what responsibility is all about. It’s not even about learning that nothing in life is free and that we have to work for what we want. Sure, those things matter a lot, but they’re still only a small part of the overall lesson.
True responsibility is recognizing that our actions affect others. That each and every one of us has a duty both to ourselves and to others. That we are all in this together, and no one is entitled to anything beyond what everyone is entitled to. In other words, no one is better than anyone else.
Most important of all, it’s about raising kids that say, “I must do something,” rather than passing the buck to someone else or saying, “Someone really should do something about this.” THAT is the truest value of responsibility.