









🌟 Turn everyday chores into star-worthy wins!
The Kenson Kids "I Can Do It" Reward and Responsibility Chart is a durable, magnet-backed behavior tool featuring 45 reusable 3D stars and 20 illustrated task cards. Designed for children ages 3-10, it encourages positive habits and independence through customizable, visual goal-setting that parents and kids can both get excited about.













| ASIN | B00ULVNT10 |
| Age Range Description | Kid |
| Best Sellers Rank | #46,814 in Office Products ( See Top 100 in Office Products ) #374 in Student Awards & Student Incentives |
| Brand Name | Kenson Kids |
| Color | Gold Or Silver |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 4,092 Reviews |
| Educational Objective | Instill positive values and behaviors in children through a fun and engaging reward system |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00804879002482 |
| Is Assembly Required | No |
| Item Dimensions | 11 x 0.2 x 15.5 inches |
| Item Part Number | KPS-RE103 |
| Item Weight | 0.4 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Kenson Kids |
| Manufacturer Maximum Age (MONTHS) | 120.00 |
| Manufacturer Minimum Age (MONTHS) | 36 |
| Manufacturer Part Number | KPS-RE103 |
| Material Type | Plastic |
| Model Number | KPS-RE103 |
| Operation Mode | Manual |
| Operator Skill Level | Beginner |
| Pad Type | Writing Surface |
| Size | Original version |
| Theme | Star |
| UPC | 885243954200 885325655865 885340984438 827165674736 885871337253 885447106559 804879002482 |
M**B
Great quality and design
I bought this for my 3/almost 4 year old daughter to work on some behaviours and encourage her helping around the house 1) Great quality - Lightweight but durable and larger than expected. The magnets keep it up on the fridge and the stars and tasks are a good size and hard plastic with velcro backing that really sticks. 2) Gread design - My daughter can't read yet, so the pictures are GREAT!! She can look at it and tell what each task is on her own without me having to explain it to her (as would be the case if it was written words only). I also love that you have blank ones that you can use to make ones specific to your needs. For example, we did a "be safe" one to work on her holding hands in parking lots, staying in eyesight, etc. 3)Really works!! She is now EXCITED to brush her teeth, clean up toys, and set the table etc. I set it up so that she can earn target gift coins for a certain number of stars, so she is also learning that if she wants a toy, book, movie she needs to earn it. If she sees something she wants when shopping, she knows that she needs to save her coins to get it and work hard on her tasks - asking mommy isn't enough. All in all, much better than I was expecting and totally worth it.
L**.
Great incentive tool for young ones!!!
First, my only issue with this star chart is a small one: the mat is a bit thin so sometimes our toddler will accidentally pull it off the fridge when removing stars or roughly putting stars on. But in the product's defense...toddlers are tiny bulls in china shops, so there's only so much we can do without super gluing it to a wall. Other than that, I love this star chart! It gives our 4 year old concrete visual evidence of how her week is going and lays out the expectations/goals for the week. I also love that the stars are velcro. They stick well and allow us to remove stars if the little one throws a fit or doesn't listen after the stars have been done. We have been using this star chart for about two months and have seen great progress with our little one. I think having defined goals as opposed to just asking her to "be good" or "be nice" or "be helpful" makes things easier for her. We also spend time discussing her day and what she did well and what she can improve on the next day. It gives her the opportunity to celebrate little victories and to discuss undesirable behaviors and why we don't do those things (hitting, not listening, being rude, throwing fits, whining...) and encourage her to work on it for the next day. We allow her to tell us what reward she would like at the beginning of the week (within reason, of course) and we remind her of the goal she is working toward every night. I think this is teaching her how to work towards a goal and showing her that there are rewards for good behavior. She had to learn the hard way about not reaching her goal and about how really bad behavior (an epic meltdown with screaming and crying because she didn't want to go to bed) can lose stars that she's already earned, which I believe is helping her to understand consequences. She didn't quite understand what "losing a star" meant until I had her remove the star from the chart and give it back to me. I could see it click in her head and she got quiet and sad. Of course, we don't like to see that, but it's an important learning experience and once she understood, she turned things around and had a great next day. I want to say that she's not a bad kid. In fact, she a really sweet, exuberant child. But toddlers are tiny cave people and this is a great tool in helping to incentivize good behavior. If you're looking for a way to use positive reinforcement to guide your little one, I think this one is great. It also feels durable and I have no doubt we will be using it for a long time.
K**E
would recommend
I was looking for a good quality star chart after several homemade ones ended up torn or forgotten. This one is perfect because the stars are reusable as well as the tasks which can be changed. The chart has been on our fridge for a couple months and doesn't look worn at all. It did not come with a dry erase marker which I think would be helpful for writing in rewards on the chart. The strategy of using a star chart for behavior was recommended to me by our family therapist and it has worked well with my 4 year old daughter. She will come get me to show me that she has cleaned her room all by herself just so she can have a star, it doesn't really matter what the big reward is, the stars are enough for her. We have used the chart in different ways, sometimes immediately receiving a star, sometimes waiting until the end of the day to evaluate behavior. I never take away stars that she has earned. We use it as a method to stop whining, share, and other appropriate actions, rather than a chore chart. Overall, very useful, versatile, product that achieves the results we were looking for.
F**Y
Good Chore Chart
I looked at (and bought) a couple of different chore charts for my preschool aged kids, and this is the one I like the best. For non-reading (and early reading) kids, it is the best because the chores have pictures as well as words. I wasn't sure if I'd like the velcro as well as the magnets on other charts, but it works really well. Easy enough for the kids to pull the stars off, but strong enough to stay on until they do. And it has provided them a way to learn responsibility and to help out around the house. It has made doing chores more fun. My biggest complaint is that there aren't enough kinds of chores. At least half of the ones provided are behavioral things, not actual chores, while a lot of the basic chores you'd expect for kids to do aren't included, such as "clean room" "dust" "vacuum" "empty dishwasher" "sweep" "do homework" "empty trash" "clean bathroom" etc. Fortunately, the chart came with a few extra/empty squares, and being relatively computer savvy, I downloaded some clipart pics of the things that were missing, bought some sticky-back printing paper, and made my own. But I really wish they'd have made a lot more chores for this set and left the behavioral ones out. They already make a behvioral set you can buy separately, so why not keep them together and make room for more chores? The behavioral ones they do include can be pretty hard to monitor, too. For example, "Use nice words." I guess you could be on the lookout all day long for them to use nice words --or not use nice words, to take the star away--but too many of the behavioral ones seem both unnecessary and too ambiguous to really nail down if the child is doing it or properly avoiding it. I also wish they had used a much stronger grade of magnet for the back of the charts. They barely stay on our fridge. If you try to pull off a chore or a star, the whole chart comes off the fridge. But overall, this was the best one out there. If you're willing to take a few minutes to make the extra chores that the set should include, it can work really well for motivating kids. My kids love to take off the chores every week and divvy up the new ones, they love to count their stars and earn their allowance. It really is a great concept for a chore chart, just not as well executed as it could be.
K**S
Helps with child behavior
Helps with getting your child to do simple tasks around the house and earning a reward by getting stars it takes time to get used too but once u get the hang of it it’s a life saver
A**L
Really helps with problem areas!
I got this for my 2.5 year old as a last ditched effort to take naps again. I added 2 more problem areas to the chart that came with the stickers and 1 area she excels at (brushing teeth) to give her that positive reinforcement. We go to our star chart every night right before bed and she gets SO excited to earn her stars. I didn’t realize that although the nap one doesn’t work all the time, it has helped tremendously with potty training. She still has accidents even though she’s potty trained, but the Star chart has really enforced having no accidents. My daughter works really well with incentives like this and stickers so I’d recommend it to any parents who’s kid responds well to that praise. It’s an amazing tool and really well made. Highly recommend!
M**2
some tasks confusing
like that it illustrates tasks for kids who can't read yet, but some of the tasks are confusing. for example, the one that says "good table manners" on the square has an illustration of a boy eating w/ his hands w/ food everywhere. so I'm explaining good table manners butshowing this pic, to my son who is 4 years old. A few of them are like this in the supplemental packs. In the Behavior and Complaining pkg, there's one that says "Use kind words" but the pic. shows an angry child expressing mean words to another child who is sad because of those words-it doesn't make sense. However, the structure of the chart is simple and most of the illustrations are consistent w/ the task.
S**L
Increase productivity!
I purchased these for homeschool use. I didn’t see anyone post for this purpose so I thought I’d share. I teach K, 2nd, and 3rd and this definitely helped with productivity! We shot for 3 stars as a starting goal and doubled their rewards for completing all six subjects. I think this set-up allows for some flexibility and creativity. I only wish the days of the week were correct. Monday is not the first day of the week. Sunday is! This is a major fail on this product. Some children actually think Monday is the first day of the week because of products like this. I will need to correct this. A place for the child's name would be nice. I assumed we're to use the yellow star for this? All in all this is a great product and far superior to the others I've looked at. I'm tempted to make one for myself for my exercise goals. LOL.
Trustpilot
2 days ago
1 month ago