Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Quick Tips to Help Your Child Get Organized

By Autumn Lockwood


If your child's bedroom or game room always seems cluttered, messy and disorganized, you might think that he or she is simply not trying to keep things clean. The case could be however, that they just do not have skills in the area of organization. It's necessary to remember that the capacity to organize is in reality a skill that a kid has to learn. You may be pleasantly surprised at the nice neat results you will get if you just take some time to show your child a few essential tips for organization. Here are a few simple organizational hints you can use to help get your child more organized.

Shelves are More Efficient Than Bins for Toys

If your son or daughter is currently using a toy bin for toy storage, odds are things are a jumbled mess. Though it may seem less complicated to simply drop all of your youngster's toys in the same big bin, this can really make it more difficult to stay organized. After all, whenever a child wants to find a certain toy to have fun with they will have to dump out the whole box to find it. This reckless way of storing things also creates the perfect environment for things to get broken, or parts of toys to wind up lost. Instead of putting a toy box into your child's room, install some low shelves along the walls. Shelves will enable your child to neatly display his or her toys, making it easier for them to keep things neat and organized. Plus, shelves make it easy to select just the right toy whenever it comes time to play.

Organize Messy Papers

Most children seem to have troubles keeping paper items organized. Whether they have too many school papers or a huge stack of drawings and paintings, paper has a habit of making a room seem to be messier than it actually is. Start off by helping your child with gathering and sorting all of the paper things in their bedroom. Give him or her a filing cabinet to use as storage for the school papers they need to keep. If your youngster has created a lot of artwork, display it on the wall in picture frames instead of leaving them in a jumbled pile. Your child will undoubtedly take a lot of pride in their just cleaned room as well as their prominently presented artwork. Once you initially get the paper under control, it will be much less difficult for your child to keep papers sorted out. All they need to do is keep filing away their papers from school, and put new artwork into the picture frames any time they feel like it. Of course, if his or her room gets too full for their art pieces, displaying it throughout the rest of your home is always an option.

Excessive "Stuff"

When you organize a child's room, it often becomes obvious that there is just too much "stuff." If the problem is too many playthings, help your child choose a few of them that they hardly ever play with to donate to charity. This is also a good practice to implement with toys that your child has outgrown. Needless to say, if you find any playthings that are broken or no longer useful, they should just be discarded or recycled. This may be an especially useful habit to get into prior to or after a child's birthday or the holiday season, in order to make room for the nice new toys they will likely receive as gifts.

When you help your child just a little, and give them some really good advice, it won't take long at all for them to get organized.




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