Parents today live busy lives outside the home, and then have to manage a household with children on top of it. Parents often distribute some of this work to their children in the form of chores. In busy multi-child households, there are often too many tasks being done by too many different people with different schedules to easily keep track of everything that needs to get done.
Age: 25-45
- Tend not to plan chores too much, take things as they go
- Some have recurring tasks of varying importance
- In some families, not all chores always get done, and prioritizing is important
- Varying systems of incentivization. e.g.. a control mechanism "tv and internet", verbal appreciation, or simply expecting them to do them because they live there
- Work around child obligations such as homework and sports
- Often rely on chores as an actual source of labor division in the house, not just "for character", though some parents believe that as well.
- Generally has access to technology, even if only a shared iPad
Age: Roughly 6 - 18
- Put up varying degrees of resistance depending on family relationship
- May be very busy
1. The Girlscout Cookie-Selling Parent
2. MIT professor parent