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Cleaning


Child's Play

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Child's Play

Anyone who has young kids knows that keeping the house clean and organized can be a monumental challenge. With dozens of toys, games and shoes getting pulled out, used and discarded each day — not to mention the daily piles of dirty dishes and laundry — fighting the endless wave of clutter can seem like an exercise in futility.

The good news? There’s hope. Instead of getting overwhelmed and giving up, try these fun, easy ideas for managing the endless piles of stuff that accumulate in your kids’ rooms.

Hang a Chores Checklist

Download and print out our Cleaning-Superstar Success List to get you started.

  • Encourage kids to decorate their checklist with a theme based on their favorite character or activity.
  • As kids check off each completed task on their chore checklist, they’ll feel a sense of pride and accomplishment.
  • Depending on the age of your child, the level of difficulty and required time of each chore will vary. Of course, each family will have its own unique chores to add to the list based on preferred activities, pets and other variables.
  • Although you don’t need to go overboard with the incentives, it’s fine to recognize their hard work with small rewards like stickers and stars.
Make Clean-Up Fun

Cleaning up doesn’t have to be a dreaded chore. Here are some ideas on how to make cleaning the bedroom, doing laundry and washing the dishes a fun task.

  • Bedroom: Make it fun by playing your child’s favorite music, dancing and singing along as you work.
  • Dishes: Incorporate games into cleaning dishes — award points for fastest dishwasher loading and best display of teamwork to get the job done.
  • Laundry: Have Mommy’s helpers get some exercise by running through the house collecting dirty laundry from hampers. After laundry is washed and folded, get the little troopers to take another round-about delivering stacks of clothes to the right family member. Kids are active; they’ll love releasing some energy.

Schedule a fun activity or outing to take place after everything’s neatly organized. With this goal on the horizon, your little ones will be more motivated to get everything picked up and put away quickly.

Decorate Under-Bed Bins

The space underneath beds can accommodate much more than dust bunnies and lost socks.

  • Purchase a few cardboard bins (make sure they’re low enough to slide under your child’s bed) and encourage the kids to decorate their own with markers, glitter, fabric, ribbon, buttons and any other fun materials you may have on hand.
  • Try to tie the decor theme to the box’s contents — if the bin will be used for shoes, clip pictures of different footwear styles from magazines, have your child draw people on the box and then glue on the shoes.
  • Bins can also be used to organize hats, socks, toys, games and other odds and ends.

Youngsters will actually look forward to pulling out their artistic creations to put items where they belong.

Encourage Stain Spotting

Place a hamper in each child’s room, and clip small clothespins around the edge. Teach kids how to use the clothespins to mark stains on their clothes before tossing garments in. This practice will help them become more conscientious with their clothes, while making it easier to pre-treat the items when laundry time comes around.

Put Their Favorite Things on Display

Kids may be reluctant to bury their prized toys out of sight in the depths of a storage box, and understandably so. By creating a designated home for oft-used items, you’ll increase the odds that they’ll get put away after play.

  • For a girl’s room, you might hang a low shelf and dub it the “Barbie bench” — after she’s finished dressing her dolls, she can line them up along the bench so they’ll always be in plain sight instead of being hidden in a plastic bin.
  • For your little speedster, designate a bookcase as a parking garage and have him line up his toy cars between races.

Kids will be much more likely to keep items in their place when they’re front and center.

Let Kids Earn “Clean Rewards”

To encourage kids to willingly help with cleaning rooms and doing dishes, start depositing a marble in a designated jar (glass or clear plastic work best) for each completed task. When the jar is full, they’ll get to redeem it for a special treat, whether it’s a Sunday afternoon at the park or their most-requested dessert.

Encourage Kids to Donate

Let’s face it — most families are drowning in toys, clothes and miscellaneous odds and ends.

  • To help get your kids’ rooms organized and cut down on the clutter, host an activity where your child picks old or seldom-used items to contribute to Goodwill, the Salvation Army or another charitable organization.
  • Explain to them that their donation will make it possible for another little boy or girl to have a toy or clothing item they wouldn’t otherwise have been able to afford.
  • Your child will learn a priceless lesson, and you’ll enjoy a cleaner, more organized space.

By approaching chores with some extra energy and creativity, tedious tasks can become fun and rewarding for your little ones. Before long, they may even start pitching in without being asked.

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