INVOLVING YOUNG CHILDREN IN HOUSEHOLD CHORES!

Engaging young children in household chores has many positive impacts across vast areas of their ongoing development and wellbeing. Studies have shown that involving children in chores and other household activities from a young age is helpful in the following ways:

1. Promotion of building skills that enhance independence, self-reliance, and self-esteem
2. Making them feel seen and wanted
3. Teaching imperative life skills
4. Enabling a better work ethic later in life
5. Easing workload for parents
6. Presenting a possibility for developing motor skills, sensory experiences, other complex skills needed to become functional and thrive as an individual. 

Motor and sensory skills that can develop while growing up include:

1. Fine motor skills

1. These refer to the coordination between finer muscles in the body.
2. When you write, coordination between your fingers and your eyes is in use! In young children, coloring, playing, self-care (like tying shoelaces), eating, etc., all use fine motor skills. They play a crucial role in academic skills in the future.

2. Gross motor skills

These include skills that allow us to perform activities that require larger muscles in the body, like arms, legs, torso, and complete whole-body movements. Activities like running, jumping, swimming, lifting, walking, going up and down the stairs, etc., are all possible due to gross motor skills. These usually develop during childhood through play and physical activities.

3. Sensory processing

It refers to the brain’s process of receiving, interpreting, and effectively using all the information provided by the body’s five senses. Sensory processing and stimulation are essential as all our senses need to work together to make us move, talk, behave, and process in a certain way. Sensory play can develop sensory processing.

Chores that help develop sensory-motor skills

1. Laundry chores like folding clothes, rolling towels, etc., help with bilateral coordination.
2. Sweeping and mopping the house, wiping the table, cleaning the windows, etc., help with shoulder strength, bilateral coordination, and provides an excellent upper body workout.
3. Washing the dishes is a helpful task to develop bilateral coordination.
4. Sorting laundry leads to developing visual perception.
5. Packing away cutlery from the dinner table can help sort and match skills, which form the building blocks for later math skills.