I've spent extensive time looking for reward charts for my kids. Melissa & Doug have a nice one, but it had too many behavioral things on it - maybe would work better for your older kids. I also looked at the On-Task On-Time For Kids timer. It's expensive, but it might give you some ideas of your own. You can find reviews at Amazon.
What I ended up doing was creating a picture schedule with clipart from the computer. I post it where we can see it. I also (before DS2 was born, when I had my act together) printed some pages & cut them into 4x6 cards for all the items on our schedule. (My kids can't read, and I can't draw, but you could do this faster by hand.) I put the cards in a cheapo (like $1) plastic photo flip-book. The kids can put little circle stickers on each page as they finish each scheduled item, so we end up with three stickers on each page. They love taking the stickers (disposable) back off to start again as much as putting them on. If we got off-schedule, it took a few days to get them used to being back on it again. I don't see the stickers being enough of an incentive for older kids, so you'd have to add a reward component.
Why not ask your kids what they think will work? What would they like to have as rewards? You'd have to go into it with some ideas of your own so you can guide them (my kids would change their minds 500 times during the conversation), but maybe they'd be more excited about something they helped to plan? Or instead of giving them completely free reign, give them choices: Would you rather get Pokeman cards or blah blah blah? Would you rather have this kind of chart or that one? Maybe the older ones could help create the to do list.
Sticking to a schedule helps my kids with their other behavioral issues more than anything else does. It's extremely difficult when DH is out of town and I'm *always* on duty, though. I think you're awesome for handling this as well as it sounds like you are.
What I ended up doing was creating a picture schedule with clipart from the computer. I post it where we can see it. I also (before DS2 was born, when I had my act together) printed some pages & cut them into 4x6 cards for all the items on our schedule. (My kids can't read, and I can't draw, but you could do this faster by hand.) I put the cards in a cheapo (like $1) plastic photo flip-book. The kids can put little circle stickers on each page as they finish each scheduled item, so we end up with three stickers on each page. They love taking the stickers (disposable) back off to start again as much as putting them on. If we got off-schedule, it took a few days to get them used to being back on it again. I don't see the stickers being enough of an incentive for older kids, so you'd have to add a reward component.
Why not ask your kids what they think will work? What would they like to have as rewards? You'd have to go into it with some ideas of your own so you can guide them (my kids would change their minds 500 times during the conversation), but maybe they'd be more excited about something they helped to plan? Or instead of giving them completely free reign, give them choices: Would you rather get Pokeman cards or blah blah blah? Would you rather have this kind of chart or that one? Maybe the older ones could help create the to do list.
Sticking to a schedule helps my kids with their other behavioral issues more than anything else does. It's extremely difficult when DH is out of town and I'm *always* on duty, though. I think you're awesome for handling this as well as it sounds like you are.
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