Aug 29, 2019
Homework can be as much work for parents as it is for children! Resistance to homework can cause stress, fights, and at times can drag on for far longer than necessary. Our staff writer, who just so happens to be a retired grade school teacher and parent herself, shares her experiences, along with some tips from the U.S. Department of Education to help parents work out a homework routine and make the most of their evenings.
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In my ten years of teaching grade school, no other topic was more hotly-debated amongst the parents of my students than homework. In any given year, one fourth of my parents would think that I was giving too much homework, one fourth of my parents would think I wasn’t giving enough homework, and I could only assume the silent remainder was satisfied with the amount of homework I assigned. The lesson I learned was that as a teacher, you’ll never please everyone all of the time. Another lesson I learned was that as a parent, even if you don’t agree with the teacher’s homework policy, (as long as the policy isn’t outrageous) your child is still required to follow it.
You can imagine all the different excuses I heard over the years for why homework wasn’t done. There were a couple of incidents when the dog had actually eaten a kid’s homework. They brought in the chewed up worksheets as proof. But the reasons were often the same old excuses:
Bigger projects were another story entirely. When I taught third grade, I assigned a monthly book report project to be done entirely at home by my students. The projects could be rather involved, like a diorama or mobile, and I expected that some parents would lend a hand. On book report day, the projects would arrive on different points on the “polished” spectrum. You could always tell which projects were done with absolutely zero parent help and which projects were done almost entirely by the parent. And just so you know, any good teacher will grade a project fairly based on student effort and whether or not the assignment criteria was met—not by how fancy it looks.
Now that I’m a parent myself, I see even more clearly the challenges parents face when it comes to getting their kids to do homework. The time issue was the biggest for me personally. Between being a working mother, soccer practice, cooking dinner and bath time, where do you even fit in homework? Somehow we make it work, but it’s not always easy.
Another issue is that some kids just aren’t the homework-lovin’ kind! How do you deal with kids who have difficulty concentrating or just can’t sit still? What about the strong-willed child? Remember, she’s been at school all day where people are telling her what to do for 6-8 hours in a row!
Find out how to deal with a strong-willed child, in our Online Parenting course.
The following tips were taken from the Department of Education and are meant to help parents get a better handle the homework routine.
All children are different, so not every strategy will work with every child. Some kids do better with light music in the background, while other need to work in complete silence. Some children need to take frequent breaks and others might be distracted by frequent stops and will require uninterrupted work times. Some work faster with snacks on hand, while others should snack before they begin. Be flexible and learn to modify these homework guidelines to suit the individual needs of each of your children.
Here’s to another great school year, Parents! Hopefully these tips will help with homework hassles!
By Pamela Layug Laney
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