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Lila Krishna's avatar

This adds to my hypothesis that the problems you keep bringing up are a result of fewer moms able to be at home.

If a child is at daycare all day, they might clean up to the sound of the cleanup song, but they don't get to help an adult out with setting up crafts, because if they mess up, the hour is ruined for all the kids at the daycare. If parents are busy when they are home, with a small window to get a healthy dinner on the table and the house cleaned up, yeah, they aren't going to be able to take a child's help.

The thing I notice among American kids is there's very little middle ground to be a Capable Child. You're either a forever baby with cartoons and toys, or you're a parentified teen forgoing everything fun to take care of your many siblings, a la Shari Franke.

In a writing workshop, an immigrant friend was reading from her memoir about working in the family business, where she took customer orders and helped fulfilling them. I found it relatable, having helped my mom out with her business back home in child-appropriate ways. The rest of the workshop, who had been mostly raised in the US, expressed concern over Child Labor.

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Sarah's avatar

My kids did help as toddlers in the way you describe—but they stopped when they got older. An additional theory is that it’s not only “wanting to help” than explains a toddler’s desire to want to help with household tasks, it’s also curiosity and a desire to feel capable. Once they’ve proved to themselves that they can do it, they aren’t as interested in doing it (eg learning how to wash a dish.) Unfortunately, this desire to feel capable doing chores does not continue because the chores don’t get increasingly complex—it doesn’t take very long to be competent in most every routine chore that needs to be done around the house, with the exception of cooking.

I also think the culture around the rubs off (chores are boring, mindless and to be avoided) even if you try to create your own family culture.

However, my older children have expressed interest in “owning” a task. The more freedom they have in deciding when and how the job gets done the better, something that I think resonates with your writing.

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