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The Homework Revolution MAG
A young girl sits at her desk, reviewing her homework assignments for the evening. English: read three chapters and write a journal response. Math: complete 30 problems, showing all work. Science: do a worksheet, front and back. French: study vocabulary for tomorrow's test. It's going to be a long night.
This describes a typical weeknight for students across the country. Now is the time to start a homework revolution.
Do students in the United States receive too much homework? According to guidelines endorsed by the National Education Association (NEA), a student should be assigned no more than 10 minutes per grade level per night. For example, a first grader should only have 10 minutes of homework, a second grader, 20 minutes, and so on. This means that a student in my grade – seventh – should have no more than 70 minutes of work each night. Yet this is often doubled, sometimes even tripled!
There are negatives to overloading students. Have you ever heard of a child getting sick because of homework? According to William Crain, Ph.D., a professor of psychology at City College of New York and the author of Reclaiming Childhood, “Kids are developing more school-related stomachaches, headaches, sleep problems, and depression than ever before.” The average student is glued to his or her desk for almost seven hours a day. Add two to four hours of homework each night, and they are working a 45- to 55-hour week!
In addition, a student who receives excessive homework “will miss out on active playtime, essential for learning social skills, proper brain development, and warding off childhood obesity,” according to Harris Cooper, Ph.D., a professor of psychology and neuroscience at Duke University.
Everybody knows that teachers are the ones who assign homework, but they do not deserve all the blame. “Many teachers are under greater pressure than ever before,” says Kylene Beers, president of the National Council for Teachers of English and the author of When Kids Can't Read What Teachers Can Do. “Some of it comes from parents, some from the administration and the desire for high scores on standardized tests.” Teachers who are under pressure feel the need to assign more homework. But why aren't teachers aware of the NEA homework recommendations? Many have never heard of them, have never taken a course about good versus bad homework, how much to give, and the research behind it. And many colleges of education do not offer specific training in homework. Teachers are just winging it.
Although some teachers and parents believe that assigning a lot of homework is beneficial, a Duke University review of a number of studies found almost no correlation between homework and long-term achievements in elementary school and only a moderate correlation in middle school. “More is not better,” concluded Cooper, who conducted the review.
Is homework really necessary? Most teachers assign homework as a drill to improve memorization of material. While drills and repetitive exercises have their place in schools, homework may not be that place. If a student does a math worksheet with 50 problems but completes them incorrectly, he will likely fail the test. According to the U.S. Department of Education, most math teachers can tell after checking five algebraic equations whether a student understood the necessary concepts. Practicing dozens of homework problems incorrectly only cements the wrong method.
Some teachers believe that assigning more homework will help improve standardized test scores. However, in countries like the Czech Republic, Japan, and Denmark, which have higher-scoring students, teachers give little homework. The United States is among the most homework-intensive countries in the world for seventh and eighth grade, so more homework clearly does not mean a higher test score.
Some people argue that homework toughens kids up for high school, college, and the workforce. Too much homework is sapping students' strength, curiosity, and most importantly, their love of learning. Is that really what teachers and parents want?
If schools assign less homework, it would benefit teachers, parents, and students alike. Teachers who assign large amounts of homework are often unable to do more than spot-check answers. This means that many errors are missed. Teachers who assign less homework will be able to check it thoroughly. In addition, it allows a teacher time to focus on more important things. “I had more time for planning when I wasn't grading thousands of problems a night,” says math teacher Joel Wazac at a middle school in Missouri. “And when a student didn't understand something, instead of a parent trying to puzzle it out, I was there to help them.” The result of assigning fewer math problems: grades went up and the school's standardized math scores are the highest they've ever been. A student who is assigned less homework will live a healthy and happy life. The family can look forward to stress-free, carefree nights and, finally, the teachers can too.
Some schools are already taking steps to improve the issue. For example, Mason-Rice Elementary School in Newton, Massachusetts, has limited homework, keeping to the “10 minute rule.” Raymond Park Middle School in Indianapolis has written a policy instructing teachers to “assign homework only when you feel the assignment is valuable.” The policy also states, “A night off is better than homework which serves no worthwhile purpose.” Others, such as Oak Knoll Elementary School in Menlo Park, California, have considered eliminating homework altogether. If these schools can do it, why can't everyone?
So, my fellow Americans, it's time to stop the insanity. It's time to start a homework revolution.
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JOIN THE DISCUSSION
This article has 821 comments.
I have so much to say for this. I respect your opnions. I do agree with your last few paragraphs of only assigninf useful homework. But, seriously, homework is tehre for you to study what you have learned through the day. So, if you don't have enough homework to do that how will you get good test results?
Also, I am not sure about your statement of Denmark, China Japan and those countries giving less hoemwork, not sure as in if its right or wrong. But in countries such as Japan/China, even if they don't receive alot of homework as you say, they study hard, as hard as an athelte trains for the olympics. Especially as they get older. In Times magazine there was an article called Tiger Moms, read it please.
Basically what I am tryign to say is that, yes, the stress of schoolwork can get to you, it may be alot and hard and stuff. And when they admsitered the same standerdized tes in China/Japan (not sure which country exactly the test was given) that they give in America, the kids outside of America SCORED ON AVERAGE MUCH BETTER. But face it, life is ahrd. Your job in the future, will be hard and stressfull, even if you do enjoy it. And in order to get to that enjoyable successful postion you need to work your back off from the later school years such as highschool.
Ive read your comments below, of how you guys are rooting for the idea of less school work. But come on, we are a teenagers of course our instincts are saying yay that rocks. But you got to be more realsitic than that. Yeah enjoy yourself, but if you can't finish off the mroe important stuff first, how can you enjoy the fun stuff later. You can now, but when you egt into your twenties or thritiies and you havent done as well as you could in school and couldnt get a good enough job, you'll struggle with life. The world is changing and those that can't keep just won't be able tow ell keep up, and that sucks.
I knwo I'm being a storm cloud but it's my opnion and I feel very strongly about this.
There's a few problem with your logic. 1). You say Czech, Japan and Denmark all have higher test scores and less homework, so therefore homework has nothing to do with getting higher test scores. Really? That's like saying Bob wears flip flops every day, and has never gottan cancer, so therefore flip flops prevent cancer. It's an logic fallacy. Just because we have lower tests score then Denmark and happen to give more homework, doesn't mean that the homework doesn't improve test scores. You're trying to assume that the single cause of America's low test scores is homework, where in reality there is a multitude of reasons America has lower scores then Denmark. We test everyone, they test the best, different cultures etc.
2). Here's the problem with your ten minute rule. It's stupid. How are teachers supposed to know what the heck 70 minutes of homework is? 70 minutes of reading for me is 100-200 pages, but for someone else it could be 20-80. Do you really want 70 minutes of homework every night as well? As a seventh grader? Every night? Consistently?
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