How old is she? Different chores or responsibilities for different ages, ya know?
My 2 year old: we don't have a chore chart, but these are what he's regularly responsible for and what he does regularly--
1) Play nicely / be kind
2) Practice using the potty
3) Dress myself
4) Place napkins and forks on the table before dinner
5) Eat my food
6) Bring my plate by the sink
7) Feed the cat (1 scoop)
8) Take the bathroom bags out on Mondays and throw them in the kitchen trashcan
9) Pick up toys and put them in the toybox before Daddy comes home, and before bed
10) Put dirty clothes in the laundry basket: colors in the blue bag, whites in the white bag
*He also likes to "help" me cook, swiffers the kitchen and entry, and vacuums (I go behind him when he's asleep, or we take turns), he likes to empty the dryer into the laundry basket and push it to the living room (those are his choices and things he wants to do).
My 5 year old, again, doesn't have an official chart but he does stuff on a regular basis, it's just part of our routine:
1) Play nicely / be kind (help me with his little brother at times)
2) Dress himself and straighten his bed
3) Pick up after himself (and help little brother if they're in the playroom): toys and laundry
4) Help me carry cups to the table, and if a knife is used for that meal, he puts that on the napkin his little brother has already laid out.
5) After eating, clear his seat (plate and cup to the sink, trash to the trash)
6) Water the cat, tomatoes, bellpeppers, basil, and us (with the waterhose)
7) He stands on the bathroom counters and cleans the mirrors once a week
8) He gets down on the bottom shelves of the entertainment center and dusts those at the bottom
9) Read, school work, and do his best at the extracurricular activities he chooses to do
10) When I'm about to mow the yard, he'll run make sure the toys are picked up and put in the outside toybox so they don't get run over
11) Little brother removes bathroom and bedroom trashbags, big brother replaces with clean bags
12) Put away his own folded clothes (I fold)
13) Both he and little brother take things from the kitchen to the recycling bin in the garage for me
* He also loves to help me cook, helps unload the dishwasher (just the kids' bowls/plates and silverware), likes to swiffer and vacuum (they argue over who gets to do it sometimes, but now little guy can do it while big guy is in kindergarten). If he wants some extra money or something special quickly, he is all about doing extra chores (before school he helped me weed the gardens for a lunch box and 2 bey blades). And yes they absolutely get "money" --- not because they expect money for their responsibilities but because it is MY responsibility to teach him about money, how to handle it, how to save for things he wants, etc and I think the earlier the better! I've seen so many adults with money issues, that my kids WILL learn before they're school aged! In our house, it's NOT for money that they work. The chores will get done because that's what it takes for the household to run smoothly. If they do it well, without issue, they get an allowance. If they don't do it well, or if there's issues, it's still going to get done but they won't get paid for it. I don't get the people who think rewarding children with money makes them automatically not do anything without getting pay. That's not the case AT ALL----my family did it with my brother and I (and we are 2 of the hardest working, self starting people you'll ever see) and we both are doing it with our individual families now with great success.
As for the toothbrushing: I can see that it could definitely go on a checklist or chart if you want to do one, but our pediatric dentists in 2 states both say that a good rule of thumb is that parents still need to brush teeth until the child can write cursive. They just don't have the dexterity to do it properly and thoroughly (I let my guys do it first, then I get a "turn"). Not nit-picking, just thought I'd throw that out there...