Your Gift DOUBLES to Give Families Hope!

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Your Gift DOUBLES to Give Hope and Save Lives!

Will you become 1 of 56 donors needed today to save babies from abortion this Christmas? Your gift will go twice as far to give mothers and their babies hope in Christ.
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Give Families Hope!

Your gift DOUBLES to save families this Christmas! Become 1 of 583 donors needed today!

Save Lives and Give Hope

Your gift DOUBLES to save lives this Christmas! Become 1 of 56 donors needed today!

GIVE FAMILIES HOPE this Christmas!

Give families the biblical resources they need to thrive this Christmas season! Become 1 of 583 donors needed today!
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GIVE HOPE and SAVE LIVES
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GIVE FAMILIES HOPE this Christmas!

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GIVE HOPE and SAVE LIVES
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Unique Ideas to Help Your Kids with Room Cleaning

We all know the feeling of walking into our children’s rooms and seeing the overwhelming pile of clothes and toys. Learn how to teach your kids room cleaning strategies with these simple tips.

“What a mess!” you think. But it’s not your job to clean your children’s rooms, it’s theirs. Although it may be easier for you to clean the room for them, it’s important to teach your kids responsibility through this chore. Helping kids learn to clean their room provides an opportunity for much more than simple cleaning. Through room cleaning, your kids learn how to take care of their things, establish a healthy mental and physical space, and manage their time.

Tips to help kids with room cleaning

There’s a good chance your kids have a special way they like to set up their room, especially if they are older. As a parent, you have the opportunity to help your kids keep their rooms clean while still encouraging their own unique design and cleaning methods.

While you establish the chore of room cleaning, be sure to touch on important aspects of chores such as time management, schedule, and responsibility. If you need some help coming up with ideas for your kids’ room cleaning, explore these tips from everyday parents like you:

The last thing on the floor game

“Is it clean enough?” This question from our 5- and 7-year-old boys used to bother me. To teach them how to be thorough, we played The Last Thing game.

Once the bedroom was straightened, the boys would inspect it to determine whether it was tidy. When they saw items that still needed to be put away, the game began. The competition was intense, with both boys determined to find one more car, sock or LEGO block to pick up.

The child who put the last item in place was declared the winner. The winner was then allowed to choose a reward from the prize drawer, which held inexpensive goodies and treats. Through this game, our children learned what it meant to call a room “clean.”

—Linda VanderWier

Make-believe maid

Seven-year-old Gracie is forever playing make-believe. One day as we finished playing house, I decided to engage her imagination to clean her room.

“Briiing, briiiing — Gracie, it’s your phone,” I said.

“Hello?” she replied through a big grin.

“I am looking to hire a maid today,” I said. “Do you have one available?”

“Yes! She’ll be right over!” Gracie then cleaned her room.

After doing this a few times, she learned how the right attitude can make some chores fun.

—Christy Pearce

Kids room cleaning begins with toys

Children can be trained from a young age to pick up the toys in their bedroom. In our house, my kids are responsible for picking up one shoebox-sized container of toys for each year of age. So our 3-year-old can have one box of LEGOs, one box of cars and one box of small blocks in his room. Other items, such as games, large toys and puzzles, are stored in a common area.

Throughout the day, we pick up toys before moving on to the next activity. Before lunch, we clean up toys from that morning. We also put away toys before naps, dinner and bedtime. I start by walking the kids through the process, and then they gradually do it alone.

—Sara Borgstede

A sweet solution for messy rooms

To help our kids learn to pick up their clothing off the floor and clean their rooms, we introduced a room checklist and incentive chart. Our checklist defined what a clean room meant. This list included items such as “cleaned floor,” “made bed” and “dusted furniture.” Different days listed different items.

The incentive chart consisted of an empty ice-cream dish cut out of construction paper. On the bottom of it, I stapled an envelope filled with paper cutouts of colorful ice-cream scoops, whipped cream and a cherry for the top of the sundae.

When children completed their checklist, they were each allowed to add to the family’s sundae. I had enough paper scoops and other “ingredients” for kids to take three weeks to complete the sundae. When it was finished, our whole family went out to enjoy real sundaes together.

—Martha Artyomenko

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