Children who do housework grow up irresponsible, study says

Is there a reason your children are prone to emotional explosions when you ask them to do a housework? After all, each child wants to spend 20 minutes washing dishes where you ate a dessert instead of using the pot where you cooked....
Is there a reason your children are prone to emotional explosions when you ask them to do a housework? After all, who wants to spend 20 minutes washing dishes where you have eaten a dessert instead of watching favorite cartoons, playing on laptops, or just not touching them?
But instead of avoiding tears and washing everything yourself, you must keep your country. Why? It turns out that children who do chores grow up to be more successful.
“by specifying “to enable” they do it when they are young (normally fit to their age) to help them understand and recognize the concept of responsibility, work in the task division group.” So says Julie Lythcott-Haims, former dean at Stanford University and author How to Raise an Adulve! Lythcott-Haims also talked about her research, which she based on a Harvard study, which is the longest study ever conducted.
“If children don't fold their own clothes, or don't fix their own toys in their own place, that means someone else does it for them”, Lythcott-Haims said during her TED talk. And so they're relieved not only of the idea of work, but of learning that work should be done and that each of us should contribute to the improvement of the entire”.
She also believes that children growing up doing jobs will be better workers, who have the ability to co-operate with colleagues, will be more sensitive to others and can take office independently.










