The list of services is being updated.
For all necessary information, you can contact us by phone: 8 (8652) 20-55-66
The list of services is being updated.
For all necessary information, you can contact us by phone: 8 (8652) 20-55-66
The list of services is being updated.
For all necessary information, you can contact us by phone: 8 (8652) 20-55-66
Summer is not just about camp, tablets, and visits to grandma. It's the best moment to subtly, without tears and "because you have to," get a schoolchild used to household chores.
By investing heavily in academics while forgetting about household tasks, we often get the opposite effect: the child is oversaturated with information but completely helpless in everyday life. The result is infantilism and egocentrism ("the world revolves around me and my homework").
Not a burden, but a chance to feel significant. When mom says "thank you, you really helped me," the child develops a sense of their own capability. Gradually, the main thing is formed: responsibility not only for their own socks but for the overall order as well.
Let your child have responsibilities, even if they are already busy. 15–20 minutes a day won't turn vacation into hard labor, but will turn them into a person who knows how to care not only for themselves.