Teaching Children to Give, on Giving Tuesday and Every Day

Giving TuesdayToday is Giving Tuesday, a more altruistic counterpart to Black Friday and Cyber Monday, when we’re asked to give back to our communities and our world. Here are some ways my spouse and I have encouraged our son to give, today and every day.

  • We ask for his input when we give to organizations. Helen and I have a number of organizations we annually contribute to, but we also ask our son what type of organization he would like us to support. We think it’s important for him to see us making a habit of donating.
  • We ask him to put spare change into a family pot that we use to purchase groceries for a local food pantry. When we go to the store, I give him the money and ask him to help figure out what makes sense to buy, in terms of quality, value, and need.
  • We participate as a family in our congregation’s social justice events, such as assembling lunches for donation to a local transitional living center and distributing holiday groceries to homebound people in need.
  • We have him help collect our old clothes and bring them to a donation center each year.
  • We made a point of having him do a social justice project as part of his bar mitzvah preparation—he chose to collect supplies for a local animal shelter and volunteer there.
  • As he gets older, we try to make him aware of the broader social systems that make giving a necessity. What makes some people poor and others not? Are some people more or less likely to have opportunities? What can change in a person’s life that makes them need charitable assistance? What organizations are having a positive difference on civil and human rights? On medical progress? On the arts? Why is this needed? We don’t tackle this all in one conversation, but as the opportunity arises, we paint a broader picture.

These are hardly the only ways to instill giving habits in children, simply a few that have worked for us. Leave your own experiences and ideas in the comments!

 

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