| Exams before Christmas has not been an issue for my kids. |
Mine too. The actual homework is solid but manageable but there are loads of tests which puts my kid in a state of never being able to relax. No late work (which is good IMO) and no retakes so there is pressure to do well. Exams can also completely derail your semester grade if you don't do well. I do hear that the kids in Benilde have a study hall and take a class over the summer which lightens their load some. |
+1 My kid much prefers getting exams out of the way before Christmas. |
| SR high schooler easily has 3-4 hours per night |
| Not OP and not a troll—would love more answers to this question. |
+1. By and large, I think high schoolers have too much homework. As adults, if we went to work all day, were expected to participate in sports or extracurriculars as part of our work and then had work we brought home at night that took 3-4 hours, we would be burned out in a matter of weeks. |
Current Madeira parent here. The girls take 3 classes in five week mods, and it’s very intense. Lots of work and the classes move very quickly (most classes are broken up into 3 mods, so the girls get a trimester’s worth of material in five weeks for three classes at a time). |
| My kid did not end up at Burke but from talking to parents and students it sounded like not much homework until Junior year, at which point there could be a lot (or not) depending on how many hard classes you take. Plus all kids get a free period they can use for homework. |
+1 It’s not necessarily less homework, it’s just fewer subjects to focus on at a time, but it’s more intense and fast-paced. |
| And, as often stated in this forum, Field families report a comfortable homework/downtime balance that still results in great college outcomes. |
| I think, more than the school itself, the classes that a student chooses to take drives the amount of homework that they will have each night. If your child chooses to take advanced, honors, and AP classes, they are going to have hours of work each night (even with a block schedule). If they choose to not take the more rigorous courses, they will have a lot less homework. They will still have to do a lot of reading and labs, i.e. but the amount with be significantly lighter. I have noticed that my child's friends who are taking lighter loads have a lot more time for hanging out and doing other activities. My child, who chose to pursue the most rigorous classes she could test into, has very little free time each evening (again, she was aware of what her homework load was going to be and chose to move forward with the difficult classes anyway). I hope this helps! |
Same for my kid. It’s a push but Christmas break will actually be a REAL break with time to rest/travel/do fun things, with midterms taking place before vacation starts. It’s healthy to have some real downtime. DC is in several honors classes at SJC and has a heavy homework load, but has loved the block schedule which spreads out the work. Some nights are better than others, with math being the biggest time-suck. DC came from a Catholic K-8 so they are used to frequent tests and quizzes with no retakes. |
This! One student’s homework load can be completely different from another student’s at the same school depending on the classes they choose to take. |
Current Field parent. Agree with this and would also mention that there is a lot of emphasis on executive function and how to plan for assignment timing and how to balance homework with other extracurricular commitments. The advisor structure at Field has been helpful to us. |
| Homework in HS is optional and not graded at Maret. Students take two assessments a year, but it is to prepare students for assessments for college testing/admissions. They also have a free period starting in 9th. |