Please just stop. Multiple people have told you that every teacher and every school does things differently and you are just going on and on about your child's specific situation not understanding that our children are not all taking the same classes as him and not in the same school as him. Kudos to you for having such a brilliant child though. Great job, momma! That's what you were looking for, right? Your child is awesome, and so are you!!! |
I don't know why you insist that the only children who can't finish their work at school are those with processing disorders, ADHD, or OMG want to take a minute to talk to their friends at school. What a bizarre take on things. Every child has their own pace of doing things. The smartest kid in the world who does not have any learning disabilities, doesn't have ADHD, isn't spending time talking to their friends can STILL take a long time to do their homework. Not everyone works at the same pace as your kid. You are SUPER WEIRD lady. You must be on the spectrum. (see what I did there?) |
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This one crazy lady is missing that sometimes at the end of a period on a Friday morning of a day that kids don't have advisory, a teacher assigns something and says "this is due Tuesday before class starts." And yes, maybe PP's perfect little child will save it until Monday to do in his advisory period and because he's so smart and fast and doesn't have any friends or outside interests, he just 100% knows that he'll be able to get it done at the very last minute Monday afternoon. Meanwhile, a different child in his class is like "Hm, I don't know what's going to happen on Monday, maybe another teacher will assign something that I want to do during advisory period that day or maybe I'll want to go work on my art project or go to the library during advisory, so I'll just do this on Saturday afternoon at home so that I can turn it in early and not have to worry about it on Monday."
And tada! Another perfect child who has no processing disorders or learning disabilities or ADHD and maybe even doesn't have any friends like OP's child has....homework!! I can't believe I just spent a couple minutes of my time having to explain this to her though. What a freak. |
| Our school doesn’t even have a period called ‘advisory’. They sometimes have a period where the kids are taught handed-down extra topics, such as social-emotional learning. But, this seminar class doesn’t happen on ‘anchor’ days. So, the crazy lady on here with the ‘perfect’ child is ignorant of the various schools and their varied ways. Some schools don’t even follow a block schedule all five days of the week. There is no way that the crazy lady knows everyone’s schedule and circumstances across FCPS. |
I'm not the crazy lady, but I wasn't aware that not everyone follows a block schedule. I do find it pretty wild that they are not consistent with this across all FCPS schools. |
You wrote a bunch of rubbish. Homework is not consistently posted on Schoology at our schools. It’s remarkable, but some teachers still provide items in only paper form. Crazy lady is not omnipotent. |
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Homework is widely accepted as an inequitable practice today. First of all, there is the digital divide. Many assignments require a computer and internet access, which are not equally available to all students. This is known as the "homework gap," and it forces some students to use libraries or find public Wi-Fi, which is not always feasible.
Second, there’s the gap in parental and guardian support: Students from families with more flexible work schedules or higher education levels may receive more help from parents with homework, while students with working parents, one or more parents involved with correctional institutions, or single parents, may have less support or more pressure to handle domestic duties. Furthermore, there’s the stable environment gap. Some students may not have a quiet or stable home environment conducive to focusing on homework, whereas others (particularly those benefiting from unearned privilege) may have dedicated spaces for study. |
This has always been the case. |
The answer is to not give homework so no one learns the material properly? Good call. (Eye roll) This has long been an issue. Schools are not going to fix the root cause of those issues. Telling kids who do have support that they should not be practicing what they learned at school so they can master it to not do that so that the kids who have crappy home lives can have classmates struggling closer to the way they are is not a good answer. |
You either don't have a middle/high schooler or you don't have a child in FCPS. Homework is 10% of the kids' grade in each class. A lot of teachers do adhere to this philosophy, they just say in class work counts as homework so there isn't homework, but some do actually give homework. |