
More Through a child’s eyes videos.
Battling over chores with your kids? Watch this video with your children and start a conversation about how your family should manage chores.
Learn more:
- Find out the secret to getting kids to do chores from parenting expert Christine Carter.
- Should allowance be contingent on kids doing chores?
- Learn how parenting author Bruce Feiler got his kids to think of housework as awesome.
- ±«²õ±ðÌý³Ù³ó¾±²õ chore chart as a fun way to have your child help out at home.
Video transcript
Child: “One time, I was like in the middle of a good book, and my parents just asked me to like sweep the dining room.”
Parent: “Zenobia! Zenobia!”
Child: “What?”
Parent: “Can you sweep and mop this area?”
Child: “I just said no, I don’t want to do it! And so then my parents would get mad and I would get annoyed, and then there’d be a big fight and like, my parents would be yelling at me and I’d be like, crying… Like, the last three years, it’s just been — my parents would just ask us to do something and we were expected to do it. And a lot of the time I would just say I didn’t want to do it. It was a little bit after a fight, and I just said “I just want a chore to myself”. And then they said “Okay, that sounds good.” Now I just have one chore, and it’s just every day after dinner I do the dishes. I like having a routine. My sister, she has a lot of small jobs, she just forgets about them, because there’s so many. I think having one big job is much better because you can’t really forget it. It makes you feel like you have a big responsibility. Once I’d done it for about a month, I felt proud of doing it. I think my parents are happy that I’ve been doing this, and proud of me, because I feel like it’s a big job, and that I am doing kind of a lot! So, yeah.”