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Teaching Teens the Value of Hard Work
In this episode, Matt and Charla bust the myth that teens will “just get” a work ethic.
Spoiler alert: They won’t.
Work ethic is taught, modeled, and experienced—it takes intentional parenting, not crossed fingers and good vibes.
1. Hard work isn’t natural—it’s learned.
Teens aren’t lazy, they’re just inexperienced. If they’ve never had to work for something, they won’t magically know how to when it counts.
2. They value what they earn.
When teens hustle for something, they care more about it. That shiny new thing feels different when it’s the result of sweat equity.
3. Chores ≠ Jobs.
Chores are unpaid, non-negotiable, and part of being in a family. You live here, you contribute—no negotiations required.
4. Allowance is a tool, not a wage.
Don’t pay for chores. Instead, treat allowance like a soccer ball—it’s practice gear for building money skills.
Need a refresher? Revisit episodes 25-07 and 25-08.
5. “Wants” are work opportunities.
If your teen wants more than the basics—great! That’s a work-for-want moment. Don’t fund the wish. Fund the hustle. Charla’s got a full list of job ideas on the blog (link below).
6. Real-life job ideas we love:
Organizing junk drawers
Shoveling snow
Hauling mulch
“Wee Haul” – a weekly bin-rolling biz
Raking leaves after a storm
Opportunities are everywhere—if they’re willing to look.
7. Not willing to work for it?
Then it may not be worth your money either. That’s part of the growing-up lesson: prepare before the opportunity, not after it arrives.
Require chores – cost of family membership
Provide allowance – practice tool for financial literacy
Offer paid projects – real-world training for work ethic
Charla’s Blog: https://beyondpersonalfinance.com/our-blog
Subscribe: https://beyondpersonalfinance.com/subscribe-1
Explore Our Curriculum: https://beyondpersonalfinance.com
The post Teaching Teens the Value of Hard Work appeared first on Ultimate Homeschool Podcast Network.
Teaching Teens the Value of Hard Work
In this episode, Matt and Charla bust the myth that teens will “just get” a work ethic.
Spoiler alert: They won’t.
Work ethic is taught, modeled, and experienced—it takes intentional parenting, not crossed fingers and good vibes.
1. Hard work isn’t natural—it’s learned.
Teens aren’t lazy, they’re just inexperienced. If they’ve never had to work for something, they won’t magically know how to when it counts.
2. They value what they earn.
When teens hustle for something, they care more about it. That shiny new thing feels different when it’s the result of sweat equity.
3. Chores ≠ Jobs.
Chores are unpaid, non-negotiable, and part of being in a family. You live here, you contribute—no negotiations required.
4. Allowance is a tool, not a wage.
Don’t pay for chores. Instead, treat allowance like a soccer ball—it’s practice gear for building money skills.
Need a refresher? Revisit episodes 25-07 and 25-08.
5. “Wants” are work opportunities.
If your teen wants more than the basics—great! That’s a work-for-want moment. Don’t fund the wish. Fund the hustle. Charla’s got a full list of job ideas on the blog (link below).
6. Real-life job ideas we love:
Organizing junk drawers
Shoveling snow
Hauling mulch
“Wee Haul” – a weekly bin-rolling biz
Raking leaves after a storm
Opportunities are everywhere—if they’re willing to look.
7. Not willing to work for it?
Then it may not be worth your money either. That’s part of the growing-up lesson: prepare before the opportunity, not after it arrives.
Require chores – cost of family membership
Provide allowance – practice tool for financial literacy
Offer paid projects – real-world training for work ethic
Charla’s Blog: https://beyondpersonalfinance.com/our-blog
Subscribe: https://beyondpersonalfinance.com/subscribe-1
Explore Our Curriculum: https://beyondpersonalfinance.com
The post Teaching Teens the Value of Hard Work appeared first on Ultimate Homeschool Podcast Network.