Too much homework isn’t good for kids.
Research has found that homework offers no real benefit to primary school children. According to the Australian Institute of Family Studies, 95% of 10 and 11 year old children in Australia are given homework, but Richard Walker from Sydney University’s education faculty says only students in years 11 and 12 benefit from after-school work. “The amount of homework is a really critical issue for kids. If they are overloaded they are not going to be happy and not going to enjoy it,” he said.
Meanwhile, in France a group of parents are boycotting homework. They say “its useless, tiring and reinforces inequalities between children.” Homework is officially banned for primary school children in France, but teachers send students home with work anyway. This is from The Guardian:
“They say homework pushes the responsibility for learning on parents and causes rows between themselves and their children. And they conclude children would be better off reading a book.
‘If the child hasn’t succeeded in doing the exercise at school, I don’t see how they’re going to succeed at home,’ said Jean-Jacques Hazan, the president of the FCPE, the main French parents’ association, which represents parents and pupils in most of France’s educational establishments. ‘In fact, we’re asking parents to do the work that should be done in lessons’.”
What are your thoughts on homework?
High-class escorts in Spain are striking. ‘They’re refusing to have sex with the country’s most powerful bankers – until they agree to open up credit lines to struggling families. “We are the only ones with a real ability to pressure the sector,” Madrid’s largest luxury prostitute trade association said. “We have been on strike for three days now and we don’t think they can withstand much more,’ said a women, known as Ana MG. Apparently the bankers have been trying to get around the protest by posing as engineers or architects, but they’re “not fooling anyone.”
Top Comments
I believe there has to be a balance here. Having a child commence a routine at a young age to complete 5-10 minutes of homework would potentially set the child in good stead by the time they commence high school when the homework load increases. The 5-10 minutes could include 2-3 sentences of the days events, sight words, reading allowed to the parents (which could be done whilst cooking dinner).
Giving a young child more intensive tasks to do at home after already being attentive all day, will of course be tiresome for them and would not be surprising to see the disinterest or an unwillingness to be completed by the child.
I am a teacher and I can honestly say I hate homework - with a passion. It causes fights in families and stress all round. I gave homework to my senior grades because that was the schools policy and that's what parents expected, but I gave it on a Monday, due in on a Thursday (those who didn't have it by Friday spent their lunchtime completing it). That way everyone has a free weekend! Hooray! Social time is just as important for kids, playing and spending time with their families will produce as much, if not more, learning than homework - which should only be revision if anything.
Thank God for you. In some ways I see why homework gets set, particularly in the senior years of high school. But, oh the drama! Some of those projects are nightmarish. I don't even do them for my kids, I just supervise them and help them find information when needed.