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Thirteen Tips to Get Your Kids Organized
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Thirteen Tips to Get Your Kids Organized
by Annie Thomas-Burke
Description: Tips for helping your kids learn good organizational habits.
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We all know that we want to be a good example to our kids.
What habits will they grow up with as they watch our
organizational behaviors? If we don’t respectfully put away
our things, why should they? It’s not difficult to get them
involved. They want to improve the rooms they live in. Ask
them if they would like a new paint color and watch how
excited they get at the choices you just gave them.
Choice is at the heart of it all. They want to be able
to decide. They love being given that authority.
Lets encourage that!
1. Let Them Help! Let them tell you what they are ready to
get rid of. Often it is the adults that are more attached to the
memory of the item than the child. Keep only those things
that you both cant live without.
2. Sort, Toss, Donate. They should be a part of the organizing
process. When purging items, have kids pick out their favorite
toys and discard the old, out grown or broken ones. Give good
used toys to a local charity. Kids love knowing they are helping
someone else. Donate clothes too.
3. Use clear plastic containers with hinged lids, for storing
small toys. Make the storage age appropriate using labels
with pictures instead of words for young children. Let them help
make the labels. Use filing boxes for awards, cards and reports.
Make one file for each child.
4. One In / One Out. Utilize this important organizing rule.
One in One out simply means, if you bring home one new toy
or one new pair of shoes, you should be willing to give one of the
same away.
5. Use low shelving for toys and books. Create separate areas for toys,
games, books, art supplies etc… let your kids tell you what works
best for them. Containerize and label it all clearly.
6. Use Hanging Systems. Install low shelving in closets or rod
hanging systems for clothes they can reach themselves. Use a
hanging sweater keeper to decide on outfits for each weekday in
advance. Your child only needs to take the clothes off the shelf to be
ready. No searching. No stress in the morning.
7. Store Keepsakes. Everything doesn't have to be displayed
all at once. Some items may be rotated in and out of long-term
storage. Store these and out of season clothes high up on closet
shelves in clear boxes.
8. Buy A Hamper. Place a laundry hamper inside your child's
room. There are many fun and decorative hampers on the
market today. Let your child choose one that matches their
room’s décor. Expect it to be used.
9. Use Hooks. Install low-hanging hooks for clothes, backpacks
and accessories. Install on the back of a door or inside a closet wall.
This helps to lessen the visual clutter that kids rooms are known for.
10. Honor Their Accomplishments. Use interchangeable acrylic
frames to highlight artwork or good reports from school. Kids love
to see that you are proud of them. Change out the pictures periodically
and keep the best pieces in your keepsake file.
11. Use Vertical Space. Use shelving one foot from the ceiling
all the way around the room to display those things that are fragile
or collections. Periodically reevaluate the items to see if they need
to be transferred to long-term storage or donated to charity.
12. Utilize An Action Center. Use an in and Out Box system
for papers that need signed, or their invitations to events. Kids
learn quickly where their papers need to go in order for them to
be signed. They experience less stress and so do you.
13. Time Them. Use a timer and small rewards to motivate
kids to tidy their spaces. Make it a fun time for you all.
Encourage them to keep it tidy by allowing them some control
on how the room is set up. The color, the theme and the age
range. Let them tell you what they are ready for and work
with them to make it happen for them.
Article Source: http://www.parentsupersite.com/ad
Annie Thomas-Burke © http://www.designsbyannieb.com Professional Organizer, Freelance Writer
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