I've got a super simple chart that worked for us. My daughter is now almost 5 yrs, but last year at this time she was becoming a little terror, really testing her limits. At the time, I too, was searching stores for the perfect behavior chart and just couldn't find what I was looking for. I decided to take matters into my own hands. I went to Walmart and bought a small whiteboard (about 11 X 10 or so) and some dry erase markers in different colors. I used the board in a vertical direction and wrote in one color the day of the week at the top. Then on the left hand side wrote 5 (one word) trouble areas in a different color than the day of the week. For Emma she was fighting sleeping and eating in particular, so ours said, Bed, Breakfast, Lunch, Nap, Dinner. The Bed was for going to bed the night before and therefore when she went to bed well she started off the next day with a happy face already and that was very encouraging for her. I also made it a point to choose 5 areas of improvement because I thought she should earn the same number of happy faces as how old she is. By giving her 5 opportunities it gave her a chance to miss one every day, I figured I can't expect her to be perfect every day no one is and by giving her that one area to miss she also would get a wake up call and make sure she did good for the rest of the day. So at the bottom of the list I drew a line across the board from side to side, under the line I drew a picture or put a small piece of velcro there to velcro a picture of that days reward. Everyday at the end of the day after receiving that days reward (if so) then she would choose within reason her next days reward. Her particular rewards were, a special snack before bed (ice cream or cookie), to play a game with mommy and daddy alone after her younger brother was in bed (that was a big deal for her to have that special time), to go to the local park or playground after dinner, among other things. It took about a day or two for her to really catch on to the system, it was so quick. And even though she didn't know how to read it didn't matter because she quickly realized what her problem areas were and of course I was constantly reminding and encouraging her to do well. So at the beginning of breakfast I would say remember if you eat all your breakfast you'll get a happy face and all you need is 2 more to get your treat (given she started the day with her happy face from going to bed well the night before). For the first week or two I made it somewhat easy for her to earn the happy faces so that she stayed encouraged and felt optimistic, so I would give her maybe a little less food on her plate so that I knew she could easily finish it without a fight. Then gradually worked up to what I would normally expect her to eat, so slight of a difference that she didn't even notice, but it worked! There is one more thing I added to the chart later after about a month. Emma caught on a little and realized I can behave badly but as long as I do good in the areas on the chart I'll get my treat! So, I made a little change, I kept everything the same so not to throw her off the whole idea, except I added X's for bad behavior. On the right hand side I would put a large red X if she was really behaving badly, she could still be earning her happy faces for the areas on the left, but if at any point she got 3 X's for the day she was done and even if she got happy faces in all the areas she would not receive any treat! That too also caught on real quick! The only other thing is that if she had an awesome day and got 5 happy faces then she got to get 2 things (again within reason), maybe a bigger bowl of ice cream or some ice cream and a game. I hope this all makes sense to you and I'll tell you that it was so easy I could make it the way I wanted it to be without changing an already made chart. And within a couple months we didn't even need the chart anymore! And it was super easy for both my husband and I to be a part of, he could come home from work and see right away how her day was going. Oh, I also put some velcro on the back and hung it in the kitchen on the fridge or end of the cabinets so it was easy access and easy for her to check out throughout the day! It really really worked well and fast i was very surprised and wished I had thought of it sooner! The most important part is to make it simple to follow for your son and at the beginning to keep it a little easy to achieve, because if he feels he can't even earn the happy face he will be discouraged quickly and give up trying and it'll never work! Again I liked to use the different colors for each thing in order to help her distinguish, since she couldn't read. (also she learned to read those words on her chart after seeing them on a daily basis too) So for our chart the target areas were black, day of week blue, happy faces purple, X's red. It was the cheapest and easiest chart ever! Good luck and if you have any questions or want to see a picture of her chart send me a note and I'll get you my email. Good luck Jennifer