Oh, Dearest Mother, Sweetest Virgin of Altagracia, our Patroness. You are our Advocate and to you we recommend our needs. You are our Teacher and like disciples we come to learn from the example of your holy life. You are our Mother, and like children, we come to offer you all of the love of our hearts. Receive, dearest Mother, our offerings and listen attentively to our supplications. Amen.



Active Topics || Favorites || Member List || Search || About Us || Help || Register || Login
Mothering and Family Life
 4Real Forums : Mothering and Family Life
Subject Topic: Older Children Helping Younger Post ReplyPost New Topic
Author
Message << Prev Topic | Next Topic >>
Bridget
Forum All-Star
Forum All-Star
Avatar

Joined: Feb 07 2005
Location: Michigan
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 2198
Posted: Feb 18 2005 at 12:06pm | IP Logged Quote Bridget

I'm expecting our seventh child and have had quite a bit of
morning sickness. The only way we have managed is for the
older children to pick up some of the work of caring for the little
ones. This has gone really well and they have done better than
I hoped.

The three olders help the three youngers get food, drinks, coats
on, and with getting dressed in the morning and evening. They
also change wet diapers.

This has helped the olders develope a greater sense of
responsibility for the family and an increased confidence in
helping.

I was wondering what specific responsibilities other families
give to their older children to help with the younger ones.

__________________
God Bless,
Bridget, happily married to Kevin, mom to 8 on earth and a small army in heaven
Our Magnum Opus
Back to Top View Bridget's Profile Search for other posts by Bridget Visit Bridget's Homepage
 
Elizabeth
Founder
Founder

Real Learning

Joined: Jan 20 2005
Location: Virginia
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 5595
Posted: Feb 18 2005 at 12:51pm | IP Logged Quote Elizabeth

I'm not hugely organized in this regard. I tend to assign tasks as they present themselves. For instance, when we are leaving the house, I quickly pair and older with a younger and ask that they help with coats, shoes, clean faces, etc. Our bedrooms are divided such that each younger child sleeps with an older child and the older child is there in the room whenever the younger one is. together, they are supposed to keep the room clean (at least that's the theory). This works well except in the case of Nicholas and Christian. There, some reversal takes place, since Nicholas has a far better sense of order than christian. We all have a sixth sense about keeping an eye on the little ones. I have a hunch, (and a little bird confirmed my suspicions) that it was the big kids who kept the house running the week I was in the hospital after Katie's birth. I think they are going to be great spouses some day.

I do worry sometimes about giving my younger children the same experience with babies and children. They won't have the natural learning opportunities that their siblings do. My eldest four are real pros with little ones.I want the same experience for the little ones.

__________________
Elizabeth Foss is no longer a member of this forum. Discussions now reflect the current management & are not necessarily expressions of her book, *Real Learning*, her current work, or her philosophy. (posted by E. Foss, Jan 2011)
Back to Top View Elizabeth's Profile Search for other posts by Elizabeth
 
Molly Smith
Forum All-Star
Forum All-Star


Joined: Feb 08 2005
Location: Virginia
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 669
Posted: Feb 18 2005 at 5:01pm | IP Logged Quote Molly Smith

We just had our first forray into this arrangement while out of town last weekend. Jeanne (9) was partnered with Timmy (5) and Mattthew (almost 7) was partnered with Sarah (2). It was neat because up until now I've always just put the extra responsibilities on Jeanne, but I realized just how helpful and responsible Matthew can be. Matthew can be a helper, and Jeanne can have some relief.

Did you see the Discovery Channel special on the Duggars, who were expecting their 15th? Each younger child had an older child who helped them with everything--teeth, hair, dressing, make bed, chores, food, etc. The youngest was always partnered with Mom and received a sibling helper when a new sibling arrived. It worked great for them! Neat show, by the way, if you can catch it.

__________________
Molly Smith in VA
Mom to seven beautiful children, ages 1-14
Back to Top View Molly Smith's Profile Search for other posts by Molly Smith
 
Bridget
Forum All-Star
Forum All-Star
Avatar

Joined: Feb 07 2005
Location: Michigan
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 2198
Posted: Feb 18 2005 at 5:19pm | IP Logged Quote Bridget

[
Did you see the Discovery Channel special on the Duggars,
who were expecting their 15th? Each younger child had an
older child who helped them with everything--teeth, hair,
dressing, make bed, chores, food, etc. The youngest was
always partnered with Mom and received a sibling helper when
a new sibling arrived. It worked great for them! Neat show, by
the way, if you can catch it.[/QUOTE]

I really want to see it! We don't have TV.
I have asked 3 different people to tape that show for me! Each
time they have a tech problem. I would love to see it if anyone
can tape a copy for me. I would be happy to pay for the tape
and shipping.

__________________
God Bless,
Bridget, happily married to Kevin, mom to 8 on earth and a small army in heaven
Our Magnum Opus
Back to Top View Bridget's Profile Search for other posts by Bridget Visit Bridget's Homepage
 
Molly Smith
Forum All-Star
Forum All-Star


Joined: Feb 08 2005
Location: Virginia
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 669
Posted: Feb 19 2005 at 5:26am | IP Logged Quote Molly Smith

Bridget, if I see it coming on again I will TiVO it and see if my dh can figure out how to copy that to a VHS. It was a very inspiring story and definitely worth viewing. I'd like to see it again!

Also, regarding partnering the children, up until last week I'd paired the older girl with the younger girl and the older boy with the younger boy. The girls did fine, but the boys are only 21 months apart and they just fought. Pairing them by age instead of by gender worked much better. Maybe a clearer mind would have seen that sooner, but I'm pretty foggy these days. This gives Matthew (my biggest challenge in life) a chance to be responsible and respected instead of fighting to be top dog (he rarely won).

__________________
Molly Smith in VA
Mom to seven beautiful children, ages 1-14
Back to Top View Molly Smith's Profile Search for other posts by Molly Smith
 
Willa
Forum All-Star
Forum All-Star
Avatar

Joined: Jan 28 2005
Location: California
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 3881
Posted: Feb 19 2005 at 10:49am | IP Logged Quote Willa

An older Catholic dad gave us that advice about pairing our olders and youngers back when we had just four. For some reason, we never actually did the pairing in a formal way.    I think I had a false vision that a REAL mom should do everything herself.   Plus, my later kids seemed to arrive at longer intervals, about 3 years apart, so I never really had two "babies" at the same time after the first three who came pretty close together.

Now, I have two "babies" in a way since my youngest is 2 and Aidan, who's five, is about 2 in his self-care and impulse control.   So very late, I've started assigning olders to youngers but since I have five "olders" I alternate assignments depending on what's to be done. It's sort of informal, but it works.   For example, when we go to the library one kid dresses one "baby" and one dresses the other. Then they put them in their car seats.   Boy, what a relief it is not to do it myself.

All the olders keep a look-out for the youngers, for example following them when they start climbing the stairs, but when I know I will be "off-watch" I assign an older to supervise the babies formally.

Also, we have a chore rotation that includes a slot for "Mother's Helper" so one older child each week has hardly any regular chore responsibilities, but they are "on call". I ask them to run for diapers, watch toddlers, let the dog out or whatever comes up that doesn't have a place in our regular chore routine.

So the"Mother's Helper" of the week gets a lot of the miscellaneous baby responsibilities but I try not to make this slot too much of a burden.   Right now they enjoy it and look forward to their "Helper" week as opposed to scrubbing bathrooms and since I think it's a gift to be cheerful about obeying direct, random requests, I don't want to discourage their willingness.    

I've also starting assigning the oldest kids (teenagers) outside time with Aidan, who loves going out but is severely lacking in judgement (so I wouldn't send him out with any kid younger than a teenager).

One other thing we've started doing is assigning each older kid a little "class" or therapy session with Aidan. My daughter teaches Aidan and Patrick music and singing, and also reads to them and tells them interactive stories . My oldest son does a lot of Aidan's feeding therapy and can also do most of Aidan's special medical care if I'm not around. He's also the only one besides me who can SOMETIMES get Paddy to sleep. My middlies play with the babies a lot already so I haven't added anything formal on right now for them.

It does help to have teenagers so I don't want to discourage those who have mostly littlies.... I remember when I was there and I sometimes felt like the family was an inverted pyramid -- everything resting on the point... ME

__________________
AMDG
Willa
hsing boys ages 11, 14, almost 18 (+ 4 homeschool grads ages 20 to 27)
Take Up and Read
Back to Top View Willa's Profile Search for other posts by Willa
 
Meredith
Forum All-Star
Forum All-Star
Avatar

Joined: Feb 08 2005
Location: N/A
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 2355
Posted: Feb 19 2005 at 11:06am | IP Logged Quote Meredith

Well...I 'm almost qualified to participate on this list with #4 due in late March or Early April, but I just want to say Hooray for this forum and thread! I have always read about how larger families function and the pairing idea has always stuck in my mind.

Willa, I LOVE your chore ideas and especially the Mother's helper. I tend to always ask my oldest, one and only dd to do all the running and getting because her lst younger brother tends to be a straggler, is this a six yo boy thing or what?? Anyway, with boy #3 coming I don't want her to feel like she's the only one who can help out. I think we'll start the mother's helper rotation now so they are well prepped! Kind of like baby boot camp Hope to lurk more until we're official, until then TIA for the great ideas
*JMJ*

__________________
Meredith
Mom of 4 Sweeties
Sweetness and Light   


Back to Top View Meredith's Profile Search for other posts by Meredith Visit Meredith's Homepage
 
Bridget
Forum All-Star
Forum All-Star
Avatar

Joined: Feb 07 2005
Location: Michigan
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 2198
Posted: Feb 19 2005 at 1:18pm | IP Logged Quote Bridget

There is something special about olders looking out for
youngers. My children were all around the table this morning,
eating pretzels and reading a DK science book together.

The two youngest were on the laps of their older siblings who
are in charge of them. The olders were talking about the book,
while feeding pretzels and drinks to their charges as naturally
as we parents do it. Never missing a beat in their conversation.

Later I heard one of the olders giving a theology lesson on the
Trinity to the five year old.

__________________
God Bless,
Bridget, happily married to Kevin, mom to 8 on earth and a small army in heaven
Our Magnum Opus
Back to Top View Bridget's Profile Search for other posts by Bridget Visit Bridget's Homepage
 
teachingmyown
Forum All-Star
Forum All-Star
Avatar

Joined: Feb 20 2005
Location: Virginia
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 5128
Posted: Feb 20 2005 at 2:27pm | IP Logged Quote teachingmyown

Do any of you find that your "olders" get a little resentful about helping? Maybe I should be asking this in the teen forum? My oldest(13) is almost five years older than the next child and a lot of the weight of helping has always fallen on him. One of his favorite lines these days, now that my daughter is almost 9, is that she needs to be the one helping with the little ones because she is going to be a mother some day. He also declares that he will never have children.


Oh, I guess I didn't introduce myself. For those of you who don't know me, I am Molly Davis, a homeschooling mom of 6 ages: 13.5, 9, 7, 5, 3 and 18 months.



__________________
In Christ,
Molly
wife to Court & mom to ds '91, dd '96, ds '97, dds '99, '01, '03, '06, and dss '07 and 01/20/11
Remembering Today
Back to Top View teachingmyown's Profile Search for other posts by teachingmyown Visit teachingmyown's Homepage
 
TradCathMom
Forum Rookie
Forum Rookie
Avatar

Joined: Feb 20 2005
Location: Wisconsin
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 94
Posted: Feb 20 2005 at 3:00pm | IP Logged Quote TradCathMom

What has helped me immensely is to assign each child (age 5 or older)a room to keep clean for the day (along with their rooms). So if the living room is looking pretty bad I just check the chart on the fridge and call that one. Those under the age of 5 are paired up with someone older.

I also have a helper each day and they help prepare meals. They help cook, set the table, fill plates, etc... They love that job. I didn't realize how many little things I did that really could have been done by any of the children.

Now if only I had more children over the age of 5 LOL

I really think starting the children young in their jobs helps alot. The ones under 5 do have jobs but they are "little things" but every little bit helps around here.

Julie

__________________
Julie
Wife to Tom
Mother of 11
Julie's stuff
Trinity Acres
JMJ * AMDG
Back to Top View TradCathMom's Profile Search for other posts by TradCathMom Visit TradCathMom's Homepage
 
alicegunther
Forum All-Star
Forum All-Star
Avatar

Joined: Jan 28 2005
Location: N/A
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 1992
Posted: Feb 20 2005 at 3:05pm | IP Logged Quote alicegunther

Bridget wrote:
There is something special about olders looking out for
youngers. My children were all around the table this morning,
eating pretzels and reading a DK science book together.

The two youngest were on the laps of their older siblings who
are in charge of them. The olders were talking about the book,
while feeding pretzels and drinks to their charges as naturally
as we parents do it. Never missing a beat in their conversation.

Later I heard one of the olders giving a theology lesson on the
Trinity to the five year old.


Oh Bridget, this is what it's all about isn't it! You are so blessed.

__________________
Love, Alice
mother of seven!

Cottage Blessings
Brew yourself a cup of tea, and come for a visit!
Back to Top View alicegunther's Profile Search for other posts by alicegunther Visit alicegunther's Homepage
 
teachingmyown
Forum All-Star
Forum All-Star
Avatar

Joined: Feb 20 2005
Location: Virginia
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 5128
Posted: Feb 20 2005 at 9:35pm | IP Logged Quote teachingmyown

My 7 yr old ds came in the room this afternoon to tell me that he was really a teacher. He explained that his little sisters did not understand the proper procedure for putting shoes in the shoe stacker so he had to teach them. He went on to tell me, in very precise language, just how each shoe was to be put away! It was so sweet!

__________________
In Christ,
Molly
wife to Court & mom to ds '91, dd '96, ds '97, dds '99, '01, '03, '06, and dss '07 and 01/20/11
Remembering Today
Back to Top View teachingmyown's Profile Search for other posts by teachingmyown Visit teachingmyown's Homepage
 
momtomany
Forum All-Star
Forum All-Star
Avatar

Joined: Feb 17 2005
Location: Pennsylvania
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 505
Posted: Feb 21 2005 at 2:18pm | IP Logged Quote momtomany

elizfoss wrote:
I do worry sometimes about giving my younger children the same experience with babies and children. They won't have the natural learning opportunities that their siblings do. My eldest four are real pros with little ones.I want the same experience for the little ones.


I'm a mom of ten and have done the pairing with good results. I have also worried about the younger ones not having those same opportunities to nurture. I know that my yougest dd would just love a younger sibling to help care for. I would love to see that too, especially since we lost our 10th baby at nine days old. I would be thrilled with another blessing.
As for the younger ones not having the same chance to nurture, I have thought about this a lot. I think that they will learn lots of loving behavior since they have loving parents and all those big siblings modeling it for them. I find as my older ones get past a certain point, around 18, that they suddenly get quite appreciative of family again. Another thought: those of us with large families will probably have the older children starting families of their own with plenty of opportunities for the young aunts and uncles to practice those nurturing skills.
Also if we can be involved in a Catholic homeschooling group with large families or a La Leche group, there are plenty of babies there! It's not the same as the day to day living within the family, but it would be more contact then many children would have with very little ones.

__________________
Mary Ann in PA
wife to MIchael, mom to Elizabeth, Becca, Tim, Peter, Andrew, Sarah, Matthew, John, Leah and Joseph
Back to Top View momtomany's Profile Search for other posts by momtomany
 
Elizabeth
Founder
Founder

Real Learning

Joined: Jan 20 2005
Location: Virginia
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 5595
Posted: Feb 21 2005 at 2:26pm | IP Logged Quote Elizabeth

Dear Mary Annm
Just today, I went into the kitchen where Katie, My two-year-old, had a baby doll in a doll's high chair, a baby doll on her lap (at her breast) and one in an infant seat she had pulled up from the storage room. She was pretending to read them a story. What was really funny was that she had her foot on the infant seat and would rock it and "shush" the doll down there every so often. she's my youngest! I have no idea where she saw this in action! Perhaps they remember?

__________________
Elizabeth Foss is no longer a member of this forum. Discussions now reflect the current management & are not necessarily expressions of her book, *Real Learning*, her current work, or her philosophy. (posted by E. Foss, Jan 2011)
Back to Top View Elizabeth's Profile Search for other posts by Elizabeth
 
my4farmgirls
Forum Newbie
Forum Newbie
Avatar

Joined: Feb 15 2005
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 2
Posted: Feb 23 2005 at 5:50am | IP Logged Quote my4farmgirls

Elizabeth wrote:

I do worry sometimes about giving my younger children the same experience with babies and children. They won't have the natural learning opportunities that their siblings do. My eldest four are real pros with little ones.I want the same experience for the little ones.


Elizabeth, I have watched families the size of yours, with kids "spaced" the way yours are. I think the most beautiful part is that by the time you are really through with babies of your own, hopefully, you will have grandchildren to take over that position. I have thought about it in terms of always having a baby around at Christmas. There's nothing like those little ones to really make a holiday.

I hope I am not making you feel too old or anything like that. I have just spent way too much time thinking about just the "right" way to have a family.

Another way to keep your youngest kids taking care of babies is to become friends with a family that is still having babies and help out the mom. This has happened to me. My friend with 7 kids has taken my family in and now my girls have 4 older "brothers" and a couple extra "sisters". And one more brother mixed in between them. Those kids have set such an example for us on how to take care of and love each other. My girls adore every one of them. Who would think you could get 14,12,and 10 year old boys to come to tea and poetry with my little girls? Yet they love it.

We took care of a friend's two year old boy yesterday and my kids all took care of him. We have also helped out with an unwed mother's newborn. So the opportunities are out there.

__________________
Katy
Mom to 4 beatiful girls (8,6,3,2) and two saints in heaven
Back to Top View my4farmgirls's Profile Search for other posts by my4farmgirls
 

If you wish to post a reply to this topic you must first login
If you are not already registered you must first register

  [Add this topic to My Favorites] Post ReplyPost New Topic
Printable version Printable version

Forum Jump
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot create polls in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum

Hosting and Support provided by theNetSmith.com