The house has eight bathrooms, from bottom to top: J'Office, 2nd Front, 2nd Back, 3rd Front, 3rd Back, 4th Front, 4th Back, and 5th Floor. The front bathrooms refer to the bathrooms closer to the Commonwealth Avenue side of the house, and the back bathrooms refer to the ones closer to the alleyway. You will be assigned to either clean one bathroom every week, or a pair of bathrooms to clean on a weekly rotation (for example, 3rd Front on one week, and 3rd Back on the next). Generally, you are expected to clean all surfaces to the best of your ability. More specifically you are expected to, in order of priority:
On some days you will have more energy to do more of these tasks, and some days you won't have as much energy. That is okay. You are not expected to overwork yourself while cleaning a bathroom. You are, however, expected to put in the effort to do some of the lower-priority tasks (6-11) if you have the time.
ALSO: DO NOT MIX BLEACH AND AMMONIA. THAT IS HOW YOU MAKE MUSTARD GAS.
Start by flushing the toilet, of course. Wear gloves. Apply toilet bowl cleaner (Every bathroom should have some; if your bathroom doesn't, then check the poop closet or adjacent bathroom) to the toilet bowl and then use the toilet brush to scrub the inside of the toilet bowl; wait for the toilet bowl cleaner to work. In the meantime wipe down the exterior (This means EVERY side, including under the rim) of the toilet using Clorox wipes/disinfecting wipes, or otherwise spray diluted multi-purpose cleaner (Every bathroom has spray bottles. If you're not sure what's in it, drain it and re-fill. Make sure to use a sharpie to label what's in the spray bottle) on the surface and wipe with a damp cloth. Similarly, wipe off the toilet seat and lid, including the hinge and under the seat and lid. Flush again after 10-15 minutes after application of the toilet bowl cleaner to rinse it off. If you need another reference: https://www.nytimes.com/wirecutter/guides/how-to-clean-toilet/
For the sink, you are expected to clean the porcelain and the faucet, including the handles. Wipe it down with disinfectant wipes or spray diluted multi-purpose cleaner on and wipe with a damp cloth. The faucet, shower fixtures, and surrounding areas often develop scale buildup that might need more wiping or scrubbing to remove. If you need another reference: https://www.nytimes.com/wirecutter/reviews/how-to-clean-bathtub-sink/
Mopping the floors mostly involves Swiffering