Nevengi Kids uses a scientifically proven reward system to turn daily battles into willing cooperation — in as little as one week.
Let's be honest
"I've asked you five times to clean your room!"
Meltdowns over screen time, homework, or getting ready for bed
Feeling guilty about yelling — then doing it again the next day
Reward charts that worked for a week… then got ignored
You're not a bad parent. You're using the wrong system.
The research is clear
B.F. Skinner's research (1938) proved that behaviors followed by rewards are repeated. Punishment suppresses behavior temporarily — reinforcement builds it permanently.
— Journal of Experimental PsychologyUsed in child therapy since the 1960s. Children earn tokens (points) for desired behaviors and exchange them for meaningful rewards. Clinical success rate: 80%+ in behavioral improvement.
— American Psychological AssociationDeci & Ryan (1985) found that when children feel autonomy (choosing tasks), competence (earning points), and relatedness (parent approval) — motivation becomes internal.
— University of Rochester ResearchEarning points triggers the brain's reward circuit. After 21–66 days of consistent reinforcement, the behavior becomes automatic — no rewards needed.
— European Journal of Social PsychologySimple for parents, fun for kids
Add daily tasks like "Make your bed" or "Finish homework" and set point values. Create rewards your child actually wants — extra screen time, a trip to the park, a new toy.
Every completed task earns points. Kids see their balance grow in real-time — triggering the same dopamine reward loop that makes games addictive, but for real life skills.
When they've earned enough, kids choose their reward. This teaches delayed gratification, goal-setting, and the value of effort — skills they carry for life.
The before & after
We know what you're thinking
A bribe is reactive ("Stop crying and I'll give you candy"). A reward system is proactive — the child knows the rules in advance and earns outcomes through effort. This distinction is critical in behavioral psychology. The APA specifically recommends structured token systems over ad-hoc bribing.
Initially, yes — and that's by design. Skinner's research shows that once a behavior becomes habitual (typically 3–10 weeks), you can gradually reduce rewards. The behavior persists because it's been encoded into the child's routine. Think of it like training wheels — necessary at first, removed naturally over time.
Token economies are clinically effective for children aged 3 to 12. Younger children respond to simpler tasks with immediate rewards. Older children can handle longer-term goals. Nevengi Kids lets you customize complexity per child.
Paper charts fail because they're static, easily forgotten, and hard to maintain. Nevengi Kids is dynamic — it's on your phone, the child sees real-time progress, and the system reminds both of you. Digital token systems show 3x better adherence than paper-based ones in clinical studies.
Nevengi Kids is completely free. No hidden fees, no premium tier behind a paywall. We believe every family deserves access to tools that work. If you find it helpful, tell another parent — that's all we ask.
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