Inspiring Tweens and Teens to Organize Their Rooms

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         Let’s face it. Very few people are born with keen organizational skills. So, as a parent, you can’t expect children—at any age—to shift into full-force HGTV mode when you ask them to clean and organize their bedrooms. In fact, when it comes to tweens and teens, you’ll have to be involved more than you probably expect. Sure, organizing things yourself is faster, but your kids won’t learn a thing unless they’re put to work. This is the age where you need to give them more responsibility over their possessions and the choices they make over the organization of them. This gives them a chance to decide what’s important to them to keep and what they’d rather let go of. Taking the first step is always hardest, so here are some helpful tips for you to give your tweens and teens to get them started:

As your tweens and teens work through their bedrooms, keep in mind that the room itself should be an area where kids can sleep, play and work. So, address and think through adequate study and play space. Here are some suggestions:

As your teens journey to adulthood, they need to learn how things get done. Your guidance in helping them clean and organize their bedroom into their own sanctuary to treasure teaches them to respect their space. Although there isn’t a magical recipe for keeping your teens engaged in keeping things neat and tidy, your gentle intervention in helping them create spaces they love—without all the clutter—likely will provoke them to keep it much cleaner than before.

Kansas City mom and author Gina Klein is currently going through these steps with her youngest teen daughter, who doesn’t want to get rid of anything cluttering her bedroom.

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