Fewer chore disputes with students' new app
It’s here. The mobile app that aims to reduce arguments over washing dishes, doing laundry, and vacuuming. It calculates who contributes the most around the house, in percentage terms. Then it’s up to you and your partner to step up for a more equitable home and a better life for everyone.
How much time do you spend arguing about who does more in your student flat or at home? Now those disputes could be over – if you want them to be.
KTH students Victor Fredrikson, Marcus Påhlman, and Elias Floreteng have developed the app Accord, which tracks household chores. The idea came a year ago when Fredrikson was living at home and his father grew tired of reminding him to do the laundry. His father suggested that Fredrikson, a programmer, create an app to stop him from having to nag.
Turning chores into rewards
Fredrikson teamed up with his fellow students Påhlman and Floreteng, and together they developed a prototype. Now the completed app is ready.
“The app helps families and housemates visualise household work and get it done by gamifying chores and turning them into rewards,” Fredrikson says.
Fredrikson says Accord’s streak function can transform household work into a competition. A streak is achieved by using the app for several consecutive days. Accord offers a reward, such as a discount on products or services, when someone uses the app three days in a row. In this way, those doing chores benefit in more ways than one. This, Fredrikson says, is intended to maintain continuity in household work.
Making it easier to talk
But how does the team behind the app know it works? How do they account for more nuanced housework like ensuring children have clothes for nursery or providing comfort when they’re upset? These are tasks that go beyond washing dishes but are vital for a well-functioning home. “Very good questions,” Fredrikson admits.
“One thing we want to achieve is making it clear who is doing what at home. That makes it easier to talk about housework and create a more equal distribution of tasks. Studies show that when everyone helps out equally, everyone feels better. And when people feel better, they also become better at caring for others,” Fredrikson says.
Works for academic housework
But could this app also work for what’s called academic housework? In other words, tasks at a university institution that need to be done but often carry little merit and low status.
“Yes, absolutely. Both there and in company kitchens. We’ve also had positive reactions from student housing companies. They have a hard time motivating students to clean and organise shared kitchens and laundry rooms,” Fredrikson says.
Text: Peter Asplund