| Above poster is correct. Teachers may govern homework, but it is not counted as part of the grade due to “equity” reasons. |
OP here, and his statement was that it is an official district policy not to give homework because it negatively impacts minorities. Whis is, as I suspected, false. |
Is there any proof of this or is it a hunch? |
+1 |
“Tenured teachers?” Tell me you no nothing about FCPS without telling me you know nothing about FCPS. I think OP’s lawyer colleague found the thread. |
It’s definitely happening in the lower grades at Westgate. |
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Yes - it’s happening at some schools:
https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1226910.page#28305746 |
Exactly. Some posters are pushing an agenda here. |
Agian, let us see some proof, please. It sounds like lower grades aren't assigned much if any homework so what exactly is happening "due to equity reasons." |
OP here. My coworker definitely had an agenda with that statement. He is very proudly MAGA and takes every opportunity to spew his nonsense. I just want him to start backing up some of the ridiculous stuff he says. |
Yes, but.... There's a grain of truth to what he said. It's not official policy but there seems to be a lot of vibes in that direction. |
NP. There is no “agenda” on FCPS part; not unless you somehow consider basic fairness an agenda. FCPS has been fully transparent in proudly placing equity for students first. It is simply a fact many lower SES and/or BIPOC learners have been found to be at a disadvantage as far as completion of “homework.” This especially unfair when homework is graded. Common decency and yes - equity - therefore dictate we, as a school system, eliminate homework to the greatest extent possible. But especially graded homework: it’s time to retire that practice altogether. |
HS teacher here. Absolutely not true in our department. We give graded homework and are endlessly frustrated because many students don't do it, and a large portion of those who do cheat one way or another. Back in the day they used to copy the key or a friend's homework. Now they use apps or AI to do it for them. We're toying with the idea of not counting it as part of the grade at all (it can't be more than 10% anyway) because we're tired of parents who complain that "my child is turning in their homework so why are they doing so poorly on assessments." (No Ma'am, they may be turning it in but they're not doing it. We can tell they're copying it off of something but don't have the time or energy to argue with you about it). |
| Homework in elementary school has little effect on learning. But some parents don't like no homework poliies because then they're less aware of what is going on in the classroom or what their kid might need extra help with. |
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Homework does not necessarily improve student performance.
And it has been scientifically proven to disadvantage lower SES and students who are POC. Start here: https://www.npr.org/sections/ed/2015/09/19/439472033/homework-a-new-users-guide |