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Why Don't Kids Do Chores Anymore?



 
 
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  #1  
Old April 30th 06, 08:19 PM posted to misc.kids
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Default Why Don't Kids Do Chores Anymore?

The recommendation is to not let children mow grass because of the danger of
cutting off limbs and/or accidents.
--
Sue (mom to three girls)

"fgoodwin" wrote in message
ups.com...
Why Don't Kids Do Chores Anymore?

http://www.careerjournal.com/myc/wor...01-opdyke.html
http://tinyurl.com/gwrn8

By Jeff Opdyke

From The Wall Street Journal Online


When I was growing up, I spent many summer days struggling to shove a
bulky Toro mower through the thick mat of grass that was my yard. That
was my main weekly chore. I pushed that same mower around the
neighborhood with my buddy, Mike, hawking lawn-cutting services for $10
a yard.

I mention this because I've noticed something peculiar while driving
around town in recent weeks: Though it's summer, I've yet to see a
single kid out mowing a lawn. I don't see any kid-produced signs
offering mowing services. I see teams of lawn-maintenance workers
neatly tending yards...but no kids.

It's not just lawns, mind you. During our time in New Jersey, I don't
recall seeing any kids raking leaves in the fall. In three years not a
single kid stopped by our house offering to shovel the snow off the
driveway. I never hear my son's friends lamenting the chores they're
charged with after school or on weekends. All they ever do is ride
bikes or dash off to this practice or that game or some camp.

I don't blame the kids. I blame the parents.

To put it bluntly: We've gone soft. Partly, I think, we remember how
much we hated the chores when we were younger. Partly we feel guilty
about all the time we spend working. Partly we're just too lazy and
it's easier to hire somebody than force our kids to do it. Whatever the
reason, many of us are slacking off when it comes to imposing on our
kids the same sorts of obligations our parents required of us.

In watching my son water some plants for me the other day -- meaning,
watching him barely sprinkle the plants amid his goofball antics with
the hose and an anthill -- I realized that it's time to reverse the
trend. Child-labor laws be damned, it's time my son went to work.

* * *

I don't recall how old I was when my grandfather -- who, with my
grandmother, raised me -- started asking me to cut the grass, though
I'm pretty sure I was about 9 or 10. I remember in second grade helping
him in the garden and with odds and ends around the house. I also
remember hating it: I would much rather have been down the street
playing with my friends, or inside watching Scooby Doo on a Saturday
morning. Occasionally, he might give me a couple of dollars for my
effort, though usually he just patted me on the back and said, "Good
job, buddy."

Looking back on those days, I realize now what my grandfather was
trying to teach me then: that you must establish a work ethic; you must
learn to take care of your property; you can't always expect money for
simply helping the family; and you must earn through an honest day's
work what you want in this life.

I can't say that I've sent an equally meaningful message to my own son
up to this point. In fact, the message I'm sending is pretty much the
opposite.

For instance, we have a lawn-service guy who cuts the grass and edges
the yard for $35 every week or two. I hired him because I don't have
the time on weekends, between writing and rehabbing an old house I
bought with a friend. The amount of money I can make on those
activities far surpasses what I pay the lawn guy to cut my grass.

Yet I'm beginning to see that the cost of hiring somebody to cut my
grass goes beyond that $35. This is the first house we've owned -- and
we've owned six -- where I haven't done the yard work. What my son sees
is his mom and me paying someone else to do what we could do instead.
So, I imagine he figures: "Why should I do what Mom and Dad won't?"

Traces of that come out when he's assigned a small chore. He gets bored
quickly and begins to play, and soon drops the task all together. It
isn't a priority for him because I haven't instilled in him that it
should be a priority.

A couple of weeks ago, for example, I asked him to water some day
lilies we had just planted. I watched him through the window: He spent
about a minute on that duty, then began spraying an anthill, stirring
up the ants and watching them busily try to preserve and rebuild their
mound. When that lost his attention, he turned off the water, left the
hose splayed across the yard and came inside to watch cartoons -- while
the day lilies wilted in the heat.

I know I've got company here. Not only do I see it in the absence of
kids cutting grass and raking leaves and shoveling snow, but I also
hear it from friends I talk to. Lots of parents don't force their kids
to do much work around the house. Why, though? Why do we let our kids
shirk the same responsibilities we once had?

I can think of a few reasons...

* * *

Perhaps the key reason is that we live in an age that's more
touchy-feely. Many parents -- and I concede that I am one of them --
are more lenient and less authoritarian than were our parents. When I
was a child, my grandparents gave me a chore and they expected me to do
it. Period. These days, Mom and Dad aren't so much setting the rules as
they are negotiating with their kids. And kids learn to negotiate
themselves out of tasks they don't want to be burdened with at the
moment.

But that isn't the only reason. It's also a question of money: Many of
us have more of it than our parents did when they were raising us. If
we can hire somebody to cut the grass every two weeks for less money
than we'd spend on one dinner out, why not?

Also, so many kids are overscheduled these days. They have soccer
practice and tennis lessons and dance class. By the time they get home,
there are barely enough hours for homework and dinner. Who has time to
weed the garden?

And then there's guilt. More couples both work nowadays, often logging
long hours. That leaves us anxious not to waste those precious hours we
do have for our kids. Chores, we rationalize, are inconvenient when we
could be doing something as a family.

So there are lots of reasons, many of them valid. But I'm convinced
that none of them are good enough, and I'm going to change things
around my house.

My son isn't quite old enough to push a lawnmower across the yard yet,
but he is old enough to help me weed the many flower beds we have. He's
also old enough to rake leaves in the fall, to help me change the oil
in the cars and to help me wash the dishes at night -- all of which
will soon be on his to-do list. I may decide to pay him a little
something for a few of those chores, since some of them are beyond what
I view as weekly obligations.

For the most part, though, I'll just pat him on the back and say, "Good
job, buddy."

-- July 01, 2005



  #2  
Old April 30th 06, 11:39 PM posted to misc.kids
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Default Why Don't Kids Do Chores Anymore?


"Sue" wrote in message
news:LJqdnU1ig5wokMjZnZ2dnUVZ_sydnZ2d@wideopenwest .com...
The recommendation is to not let children mow grass because of the danger
of
cutting off limbs and/or accidents.


I think the recommendation is that kids under 12 not be allowed to use them.
Unfortunately, not all people follow the recommendations, resulting in more
injuries than is necessary.

Jeff


  #3  
Old April 30th 06, 11:58 PM posted to misc.kids
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Default Why Don't Kids Do Chores Anymore?

"fgoodwin" wrote in message
I began mowing lawns when I was about ten years old, and never had a
problem, even with equipment (early 60s vintage) that wasn't nearly as
safe as today's models.

I think parents today don't give kids enough credit -- if taught how to
use mowers & trimmers properly, there's no reason a boy 10, 11 or 12
couldn't handle them safely.

If we could it do it back then, why can't they do it now?


This recommendation came from Wright and Fillipis who make prosthesis for
people who have lost limbs. They were very adament that children under 12 (I
believe) not mow the lawn. Lawn mowers are extremely heavy and children
cannot manage them properly, nor do they have the maturity to handle
themselves in an emergency.

We used to drive in cars without seat belts when we were kids, does that
mean we shouldn't put our kids in seat belts anymore?
--
Sue (mom to three girls)


  #4  
Old May 1st 06, 02:10 PM posted to misc.kids
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Default Why Don't Kids Do Chores Anymore?

We do have kid teams in the area who come by and offer their services on
mowing lawns, but given the risk of damage to the child, and the inherent
liability if a child injures himself doing someting dangerous under my
employ, I wouldn't hire one. Those lawn services are licensed, bonded
professionals with contracts which cover injury so that the homeowner
doesn't risk a lawsuit if they try to unjam a blade and get cut or a rock
flies up out of the mower blade and hits an eye.

A lot of the chores I did related to gardening and processing produce-while
my parents didn't have a farm anymore, we still grew a large percentage of
our vegetables, and bought much of the rest from local farms, then canned or
froze it ourselves. I'm not doing that as an adult-so it's unlikely my
daughter will ever be faced with making gallons of applesauce from apples,
picking up apples off the ground as they fall from trees every weekend for
the entire growing season, or snapping bushels of beans. My gardening is
confined to a few small flower beds, where weeding is a minimum (certainly
not the bugbear of my childhood), and since we don't have large numbers of
trees, picking up sticks after pruning is a much smaller task, one done once
a year if that.

Similarly, I washed dishes as soon as my head was tall enough that I could
reach over the sink standing on a chair or stepstool. Well, in graduate
school I got an apartment with a dishwasher, and the number of dishes I've
washed by hand since then is probably less than I washed after one
thanksgiving dinner as a child-and is limited to the things which could be
damaged in the dishwasher and require special care-which means that my
daughter won't be washing them at the age I started washing dishes.

I don't scrub floors by hand-I have swiffers and similar assistants for that
purpose.

So, pretty much, the reason my daughter won't have as many chores as I did
as a child is that, well, _I_ as an adult don't do as many chores. And you
know what? My parents, who were both farm raised, regularly pointed out how
much easier my brother and I had it than them-after all, we only had a
quarter acre or so of garden and assorted trees to tend, not acres of
farmland and multiple animals.

--
Donna DeVore Metler
Orff Music Specialist/Kindermusik
Mother to Angel Brian Anthony 1/1/2002, 22 weeks, severe PE/HELLP
And Allison Joy, 11/25/04 (35 weeks, PIH, Pre-term labor)


  #5  
Old May 1st 06, 02:47 PM posted to misc.kids
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Default Why Don't Kids Do Chores Anymore?

"Donna Metler" wrote:

We do have kid teams in the area who come by and offer their services on
mowing lawns, but given the risk of damage to the child, and the inherent
liability if a child injures himself doing someting dangerous under my
employ, I wouldn't hire one. Those lawn services are licensed, bonded
professionals with contracts which cover injury so that the homeowner
doesn't risk a lawsuit if they try to unjam a blade and get cut or a rock
flies up out of the mower blade and hits an eye.


When I was a kid, I mowed the lawn with a non-powered lawn mower.
When I was a freshman or sophomore in hs, sometimes boys would come
and mow the lawn for me (for free). I once had a 'boyfriend' who came
to mow the lawn and actually brought his friend to do the mowing (for
free) because he didn't want to actually do it.

When we moved to Louisiana we were living in a former sugar cane field
with fire ants, and it took dh two days on the weekend to mow. So we
bought a power mower and my parents were aghast because they'd only
had a power mower themselves for about two years. They thought we
were spending money recklessly etc. But it cut the mowing time down
to about two hours.

When we moved here, we, we had over an acre of lawn, so we got a
tractor mower, and ds used to mow with that. DD#1 does her own lawn
and so does dd#3. But dd#3's oldest is only 8. DD#2 who lives in
Florida hires it done.

A lot of the chores I did related to gardening and processing produce-while
my parents didn't have a farm anymore, we still grew a large percentage of
our vegetables, and bought much of the rest from local farms, then canned or
froze it ourselves. I'm not doing that as an adult-so it's unlikely my
daughter will ever be faced with making gallons of applesauce from apples,
picking up apples off the ground as they fall from trees every weekend for
the entire growing season, or snapping bushels of beans. My gardening is
confined to a few small flower beds, where weeding is a minimum (certainly
not the bugbear of my childhood), and since we don't have large numbers of
trees, picking up sticks after pruning is a much smaller task, one done once
a year if that.

I don't ever remember weeding as a child.

Similarly, I washed dishes as soon as my head was tall enough that I could
reach over the sink standing on a chair or stepstool. Well, in graduate
school I got an apartment with a dishwasher, and the number of dishes I've
washed by hand since then is probably less than I washed after one
thanksgiving dinner as a child-and is limited to the things which could be
damaged in the dishwasher and require special care-which means that my
daughter won't be washing them at the age I started washing dishes.

I washed (actually I usually dried) dishes when I was a kid and also
in college it was one of the jobs we did. I got a dishwasher when my
first couple of children were born, and then I moved to a house with a
dishwasher (in California) so I gave my dishwasher to my mom. That
was the first one she had. And we don't have a dishwasher on the
boat.

I don't scrub floors by hand-I have swiffers and similar assistants for that
purpose.

There are still floors that I'd prefer be done by hand. I don't think
you can get floors really clean with swiffers. That just works for
surface dirt.

And we did always have vacuum cleaners for the rugs (never had wall to
wall carpets except in rental houses). We didn't hang them on the
lines and beat them anymore. My sister dusted because she was smaller
and closer to the chair rungs, and I ran the vacuum.

So, pretty much, the reason my daughter won't have as many chores as I did
as a child is that, well, _I_ as an adult don't do as many chores. And you
know what? My parents, who were both farm raised, regularly pointed out how
much easier my brother and I had it than them-after all, we only had a
quarter acre or so of garden and assorted trees to tend, not acres of
farmland and multiple animals.


My grandchildren's chores are mostly things like putting out the
trash, and feeding various animals (which some of them have quite a
lot of animals - dd#2 has a dog, two cats, a guinea pig, and several
tanks of fish, and ds has two dogs, three cats, some budgies, a rabbit
and a fish tank)


grandma Rosalie
 




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