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End Homework

29 September 2008 4,890 views 19 Comments

boyshomework226Why are we as a nation so obsessed with homework, we send our children to school at an earlier age than any other country and our school day is longer, we have shorter holidays and our children have more homework than other country. The results of all this are we getting better educated children, no, higher result than others, no.

I would never suggest we should not help our children at home, help them to read and write and if they ask help with maths or what ever subject they need. How many of us can honestly say we have never been tempted to over support to get homework out the way, we hear of families devoting weekend to taking children to places for their school project and hundreds of teachers can tell you how easily they can pick out the work done by parents but cannot prove it.
Until children reach the last year of primary school I believe there should be no homework except reading to children and encouraging them to write but this should be informal not regulated. If when they reach secondary education they cannot pass an examination after five full school days over a 12 week term and four terms a year then so be it. I believe and I know there are a significant number of parents agree children arrive home hungry and tired and an hours homework is not acceptable, neither should every weekend be ruined by the continual nag of have you done your homework. Setting home work in school holidays totally defeats the reason for the break to let the children re-charge their batteries.
If there needs to be an extra prep class after school then I suggest we look at the curriculum time and or teaching. Children go to school to learn they should not bring the classroom home with them, it is bad for them and for family life.

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19 Comments »

  • Anonymous said:

    Many a true word spoken. One of the main issues with homework is the inconsistencies on the amount and frequency from teacher to teacher; let alone from one school to another. At my daughter’s school I notice that ‘homework’ has been redefined as ‘home learning’ – do they really think that parents will not see it is the same thing? I, for one will be interested to see the results from the recent decision by one of my local schools, the Tiffin School, to stop homework.
    Let our children learn from having a life outside of school – not just one continuous set of ‘learning’ tasks to complete.
    Juliet
    Kingston, Surrey

  • Anonymous said:

    Family time – however that might look – is precious. with more and more children having two working parents homeworke really cuts into the little clear time we have with our children. And that is before you take into account the time for playing with friends and other activities such as sports which many children also like to take part in.
    Our children already grow up too quickly, less homework and more time to relax, play and spend time with their family can only make their lives richer.
    Lucy, Kent

  • Anonymous said:

    All we seem to do is homework I have three children 12, 10 and 8. All we do each evening is spellings times tables reading and my 12 year daughter does about 2 – 3 hours each evening also saturdays and sundays. To be honest it is getting to much for all of us.

  • Anonymous said:

    Perhaps kids could do a lot less homework and time during school hours could be a lot more productive if teachers were a bit more enthusiastic about doing the job the are employed to do. Ie not winding down in the last week of term and having half days etc. Not to mention closing schools at the drop of a hat because it snows or the boilers aren’t working.

  • Anonymous said:

    “we send our children to school at an earlier age than any other country and our school day is longer, we have shorter holidays and our children have more homework than other country”

    I take it you haven’t researched the Japanese education system then…

  • Mrs Maths said:

    “Perhaps kids could do a lot less homework and time during school hours could be a lot more productive if teachers were a bit more enthusiastic about doing the job the are employed to do”

    That makes no sense. If I was trying to save time I would not set homework. Sometimes it only takes me ten minutes to chose a relivent homework but it takes at least an hour to mark it, make corrections and record results.

  • Sarah Ashby said:

    We migrated from the UK to Queensland, Australia 2 years ago and I can assure you the children here work longer terms (4 per year, totalling 40 weeks per year), have shorter holidays and no halfterm breaks. They are also expected to do homework. My child is 10 and has 2 more years at primary before going to high school
    All the kids I know are involved in extra-curricular activities but homework is still regarded as a very important part of the learning process by parents and they are encouraged to help in terms of overseeing and reviewing homework. Last year my child’s teacher decided to drop homework – there was an outcry from parents because working out of the school environment is seen as an important step in learning self-motivation.
    My husband and I both work but we still find we have plenty of family time to go out cycling, walking and many other activities. Maybe it’s an attitude. The ethic here is work hard and play hard, support the teachers instead of knocking them and recognise that for a child to realise their potential, not only do they need support from parents and teachers, they have to show committment too and that means homework.

  • DCSF said:

    Comment from DCSF

    Turning to your point about homework, every school will consider how much time is appropriate for pupils at each stage, according to their aptitude. The Department’s recommended time allocation, based on current good practice, is set out in Homework: Guidelines for Primary Schools and Secondary Schools, as follows;

    Years 1&2
    1 hour per week
    Reading, spelling, other literacy work and number work

    Years 3&4
    1.5 hours per week
    Literacy and numeracy as for years 1 and 2, with occasional assignments in other subjects

    Years 5&6
    30 minutes per day
    Regular weekly schedule with continued emphasis on literacy and numeracy, but also ranging widely over the curriculum

    At secondary level, the Department recommends that the time spent on homework or GCSE coursework should fall within the following ranges:

    Years 7 & 8
    45 to 90 minutes per day

    Year 9
    1 to 2 hours per day

    Years 10 & 11
    1.5 to 2.5 hours per day

    In Years 12 and 13 the amount will depend on the students’ individual programmes. However, both students and parents will need guidance on what has to be achieved and how much time it might take to achieve the required standard. Most schools set out course requirements in manuals at the beginning of the courses, with flow charts indicating what has to be submitted and when

    Public Communications Unit
    http://www.dcsf.gov.uk

  • kieran said:

    http://www.alfiekohn.org/books/hm.htm

    Homework is only necessary due to the highly ineffective methods of teaching we are still subjecting our young people to.

    The human brain was built as the premier learning tool in the universe and compulsory schooling is a long long way from engaging fully with the potential of the brain.

    Time for a new way of learning

  • Vapid said:

    Nonsense.

    People like Kieran who demand “new ways of learning” and make staunch, unnecessary complaints about the schooling system clearly have no idea what they’re talking about. I left school with GCSEs (lowest grade being a B), A and AS levels (all As) and then went onto University where I gained a Masters degree in Acoustics and am well into my second year of a three year PhD.

    At risk of sounding arrogant, I would like to make the comment that there is absolutely nothing wrong with the educational system where I am concerned, and Homework (self study and assigned study) was a very large part of my schooling, right from the final years of primary school.

    I see no reason why any parent would want their child to not take part in a homework activity. I see it as an excellent way for the parent and child to bond whilst ensuring the child succeeds in his or her schooling. I am of the opinion that the the hours I spent with my mother and father discussing science, language, numbers, history and geography set me in excellent stead for the classes I was taking, resulting in better exam grades and two exceptionally proud parents.

    Needless to say, when my child comes home with a stack of books, the dining room table will be cleared and work will be done. Education will be encouraged at all times, especially in this age where information is in gross abundance. The Internet, books, Television, Libraries and museums all offer excellent opportunities for children to grasp their education by both hands and take it to unforseen heights. it saddens me to see exam grades dropping year after year as information becomes more readily and freely available.

    I do not think the problem lies with the school, the education system or the child, but the parent and their attitude toward their child’s schooling.

    If I can do as well as I did in school, why can’t everyone else?

  • Anon said:

    More family time can be obtained by doing homework together (helping them learn, not doing the work for them).

    Homework can keep kids off the streets.

    When I was in school a student was expected to be assigned thirty minutes of homework per evening per class (3.5 hours a day). Now kids are to receive thirty minutes per class per fortnight. I came out of education with an overall mark of 91%. I worked very hard for this. Kids today are perfectly satisfied with 60%. In my day that would have not only been a fail, but an embarrassment.

    Beyond this the teachers are not failing these children, the government is. The government want statistics to show that the they are doing a good job – so they force schools to report statistics and the schools are forced to harm teaching in the process. E.g. lowering exclusions and seclusions – so schools are forced to keep disruptive and abusive students in the classroom – teachers can’t teach the 28 well behaved students because they are spending all of there time on the 2 badly behaved ones.

    I wish that every parent would call their MP and complain about this – it is so very sad that the ‘human rights’ of 28 students are cast aside because of these 2 poorly behaved ones.

    The GCSE and A-Levels need to be more difficult and more challenging. Personally I wouldn’t have faith in any student with GCSEs to be employed at my company. The levels are so low and their education so spoon fed that these kids have pathetic skills… half of them can hardly spell.

    I feel education in the UK is poor and getting worse. I also feel that this is 100% the government’s fault. If they would stop trying to cover their hind-sides and actually create policies that help students, teachers, and schools then the UK would have a chance in this world. I do not see things getting better with this current government. They should:

    Allow and encourage exclusion and seclusion.
    Have more teacher assessment in all levels.
    Have no toleration of poor behaviour in classrooms.
    Encourage more parental involvement in education.
    Modify requirements so that work is not dumbed-down – expect more not less.

    Please, if you have any concerns about the state of education in this country – be heard. Call or write your MP AND call or write the Department for Schools, Children, and Families (http://www.dcsf.gov.uk/) – encourage a positive change so that we produce the best students we are able to.

    Please.

  • Jeanette said:

    I completely agree that there is too much homework in the early years at primary school. My children much prefer to do sports, play with friends or relax a little. I find it very important that they get into a good sports routine. This is, to us, just as important as schooling. Playing with friends trains their eq, they also quite often challenge eachother with difficult sums, complicated building structures etc. All in a fun, non-structured environment.

    I looked at the recommended homework durations. my son is in yr 2, last week he got a book (100+ pages), 15 words to prepare for a spelling test, an a4 with maths and an a4 with literacy assignments, and on top of that they were stimulated to visit the new library… How on earth is a 7 year old supposed to do that in 1 hour?? Suffice to say that I complained (again). The only answer I get is that they are required to give homework, but don’t value it very highly???

    I would be happy with a book and some words for a spelling test, or some maths. In yrs 5, 6 and onwards it can be more. They can also do it more independantly,with help from parents when needed.

  • Laura Bradley said:

    have to say I agree with some of the comments above. It sounds like the attitude of the parents is more at fault here. Here in northern ireland we (so far) have an excellent education system, homework is seen as a vital part of that. it connects home and school and by necessity gets parents involved in what their kids are doing. its all about committment really, a few hours of my week spent encouraging/helping my daughter seems a small price to a pay. We actually enjoy it to be honest.

    teachers can going go so far in creating an atmosphere where learning is valued, parents have a responsibility to do what they can at home. In todays world time is always an issue for parents and maybe thats where a lot of the disatisfaction comes from. Tired overstressed, overworked parents. Maybe its our have it all culture thats really to blame.

  • Hilary said:

    There should be a distinction between Primary school and Secondary school with regard to homework.
    The only homework I was given in primary was spellings in top infants along with times tables, perhaps some reading and occassional ‘finding out about’. All ‘sums’ and writing work was accomplished in school.

    Primary schools today seem, to be trying too hard to be ‘fun’ including cheerleading, steel pan drumming, etc in the lesson time and pushing the reading, writing and maths onto the parents at home.

    Also if behaviour was sorted then a learning environment would be better created at school and there would be no need to encroach on pupils own time with too much homework.

  • Anonymous said:

    I am a grandmother and my grandson gets so much homework he comes to me on a saturday and instead of being able to go out and enjoy some time together he must do his homework my daughter is a lone parent and has to work so what time they get together is spent doing homework and he gets so upset sometimes .

  • Joe said:

    Parents have a responsibility to do what they can at home. In todays world time is always an issue for parents and maybe thats where a lot of the disatisfaction comes from. Tired overstressed, overworked parents. Maybe its our have it all culture thats really to blame.” – Could not agree with this more.

    I wager the posters above are simply failing to fit their children in to their already busy lives. Finish work at 5pm, drive home 6pm, make dinner, eat dinner, relax in front of Eastenders until 8pm. Now try to fit in some quality time with the children, but wait; they have homework, COMPLAIN!

    Now I do understand that some lone parents will have to work long hours to feed their families, however it is not teachers who create this situation.

  • Huth said:

    My child does do homework. What she doesn’t do is schoolwork at home. We wrote to the headteacher and explained our viewpoint which, essentially, is that it is none of the school’s business what our child does when the child is not at school. It was accepted. End of problem. I daresay some HTs are not so accommodating. Perhaps it helps that both parents are Oxford graduates and neither did any schoolwork at home at primary school level.

  • Clare said:

    I agree – no homework until Secondary school. I have a degree and post grad qualification and never had homework until the top two years of middle school (ie age 10 and up) and even then it was occasional rather than every week.

    I support my children with homework if they want to do it in KS1 but refuse to sign the home school agreement because I want my children to enjoy school…not be pushed into spending time doing homework when they get home and are tired.

    With three children, even reading can take an hour a day, so this is what we focus on. In my school if the kids don’t read to me 4 times a week they end up in book club at lunchtime on Friday ie they get punished for something that I cannot do sometimes with after school clubs and other things that are necessary for family life.

    Education is about more than school!

  • Shaun said:

    I totally disagree with your somewhat unfounded comments. Children in school have a valuable learning experience that they have to independently follow up at home. It is no surprise to me that the children who fail to complete homework are the children who show no sign of independence from their parents. They expect everything to be done for them. I’m sure other teachers out there know the children we are on about. If we want children to only learn in school we would have to extend the school day to at least 5pm everyday to fit everything in that we are expected to teach.

    This website seems like it is just an excuse to have a whinge by parents who have no idea about how schools work day in, day out. How about doing something about it and volunteer in school or even better try to qualify as a teacher and then see how much hard work it is to engage, motivate, inspire and delight the young children of this age for 6 hours a day without just giving them a tv or psp or x-box to play on.

    ???

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