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Should children be bribed to help with household chores?

Results so far:

Yes
25% 102 votes Total: 405 votes
No
75% 303 votes

Yes

by Tiffany Jakubaitis

Created on: June 08, 2010   Last Updated: June 09, 2010

Bribery is a harsh way to state paying your children to do something or taking away something as punishment.  If you change the word bribe to reward, still with the same outcome, then yes, they should be bribed to do household chores. 

Chores teach a child responsibility.  In our house, there are everyday chores that our four kids do not get paid for, such as cleaning their room and picking up after themselves.  If their belongings aren’t picked up when they are done with it and after a gentle reminder, they are taken away, put in a bag and taken to goodwill. 

This teaches them that if they don’t pick it up, they could do without it, therefore someone else could benefit better from it.  If this is considered bribing them to clean up after themselves, then so be it.  I simply call it accountability.

Then there are the chores that have been assigned to all four children for a certain amount of money.  They each get age appropriate chores and an age appropriate reward.  For example, weekly, our 4 year old is responsible for feeding the dogs two nights and wiping down the table three nights, and he can make $1.50.  Our 11 year old is assigned dishes three nights, cleaning up after the dogs one day and vacuuming once.  With that, she can earn up to $5 a week.

Once the “bribery” is earned, there comes responsibility.  The children learn what money is, what they can do with it, and how to save it.  If there is something they see in the store that they want but don’t necessarily need, we simply remind them that they should save up their money they earn in order to buy it.  The excitement on their faces, once they have the money saved up and we take them to get whatever it may be, is priceless. 

“Bribery”, or rewarding children, with the outcome of teaching responsibility does not “constitute a crime” as stated in Wikepedia.  It doesn’t mean that you don’t love or nurture your children.  

I was given an allowance as a child and didn’t grow up to be a corrupt individual.  I’ve been to pediatricians and child therapists who have all suggested the reward system to avoid bad behavior, so what makes this any different?

In conclusion, I believe that giving children an incentive to help out more around the house is a good opportunity for them to feel a sense of accomplishment, not to mention it allows parents more time to spend having fun with the kids rather than have the extra cleaning to do.

Learn more about this author, Tiffany Jakubaitis.
Click here to send this author comments or questions.

No

by Kimberly Cleckenr

Created on: February 08, 2011   Last Updated: February 09, 2011

Many parents today bribe their children to help around the house with chores. The most popular bribes among children include either money or new toys. Bribery is not one of the best ways to get children to do chores around the house. If children learn at a young age that they always have to be bribed to do something, it will be very hard for them to get through life. This is just not how the real world works for anyone.

If bribes are always used for chores, a child will soon choose to never help if they are not given something in return. Typically, with a bribe, the briber feels guilty to ask on such terms and the one being bribed usually does not want to do what is being asked of them. The act of bribery may only lead to hard feelings between both involved. The parent bribing will not believe this is the only way to get their children to help and the child will continue accepting bribes in order to get things he or she wants. 

An allowance or even a new video games is sometimes offered to children for doing weekly chores but is seen as more of a reward and not a bribery. If it is decided that a child can earn an allowance, it must be made very clear that this is a reward and not considered a briber. Their allowance is something that has to be worked for and earned. If an allowance is used in return for the completion of chores instead of bribery, children will learn responsibility and what it takes to keep a household running.

A child should learn that a family must work together to keep up household chores; not just one person can do everything alone. if parents are making the income and cooking all the meals, it seems very reasonable for children to set the dinner table, put away laundry, vacuum, etc. Of course children can only be responsible for the chores that are most age appropriate for them. Washing clothes and cleaning bathrooms are just two chores that need to be saved for older children. 

My son, now age 13, has been working for allowance for the past couple of years. My other children, ages 8 and 3, are not given this opportunity yet. I do not bribe my son to do his chores; it is all up to him as to whether or not he wants to earn his allowance. If he does everything that is asked of him, then he earns this allowance at the end of th week. If not everything is done; then no allowance is earned. No offering or accepting of bribery. 

Learn more about this author, Kimberly Cleckenr.
Click here to send this author comments or questions.


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