Chores for Kids: How to Build Confidence, Not Frustration
Research from the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (AACAP) shows that children who participate in household chores as early as age three develop higher self-esteem, greater resilience, and stronger coping skills for frustration and delayed gratification. For children with ADHD—who often hear far more corrections than praise throughout their day—well-structured responsibilities offer a counterbalance: a reliable source of genuine accomplishment that rebuilds the confidence negative feedback erodes.
