Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do any of you remember having HOURS of homework a day as a teen in high school? No because we didn't.
Why is it fair to push and push and push these kids. They go to school for 7 hours. Practice sports or extracurriculars for 2-3 hours more. Then we expect them to be excited and want to come home and do 2-3 hours of school work.
Teen years are supposed to be fun. There needs to be a better balance. I understand their attitude to be honest
Not the OP, but I think you are misreading this. Hours at the library with friends means not doing his work. He probably doesn't have hours of homework a day.
Anonymous wrote:Do any of you remember having HOURS of homework a day as a teen in high school? No because we didn't.
Why is it fair to push and push and push these kids. They go to school for 7 hours. Practice sports or extracurriculars for 2-3 hours more. Then we expect them to be excited and want to come home and do 2-3 hours of school work.
Teen years are supposed to be fun. There needs to be a better balance. I understand their attitude to be honest
Anonymous wrote:Is it normal to struggle with it as a parent? Yesterday ds who is nearly 17 comes home, I ask about homework, he says he has none. Then he goes to the gym and library with friends for hours. Comes home at 8.30, has hours of homework left. He starts ranting very loudly about how much work he has, how he never has time to do anything, gets mad at me for saying he had hours after school to do all this. He is a good student but could be much better if he tried harder, and he has the most horrendous attitude.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, this is very normal. They are illogical creatures at this age.
Anonymous wrote:Do any of you remember having HOURS of homework a day as a teen in high school? No because we didn't.
Why is it fair to push and push and push these kids. They go to school for 7 hours. Practice sports or extracurriculars for 2-3 hours more. Then we expect them to be excited and want to come home and do 2-3 hours of school work.
Teen years are supposed to be fun. There needs to be a better balance. I understand their attitude to be honest
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ya, welcome to teen hood. I have two teens: one is great about this kind of stuff; the other, not so much![]()
This is one area I do not want to allow for natural consequences. Grades are too important for college, but as long as their grades aren't suffering, then you just have to tune out their whining and blowups.
I try as much as possible to speak calmly to them and not blow up myself. Hard for me to do because I'm pretty high strung myself. Having kids has definitely made me try to be calmer.
I also find it really hard to not say, "I told you so" every 30minutes.
My big issue with him is he is constantly pushing, testing, saying things like why does it matter, I don’t care…. I am patient generally but sometimes after a string of incidents I can’t take it anymore, like his tantruming yesterday about something so avoidable. It tends to ruin quiet moments a lot. We were peacefully watching a show with dd who did all her work and he truly explodes over this. It feels unfair of him to impose his moods and mistakes on everyone else.
Anonymous wrote:Do any of you remember having HOURS of homework a day as a teen in high school? No because we didn't.
Why is it fair to push and push and push these kids. They go to school for 7 hours. Practice sports or extracurriculars for 2-3 hours more. Then we expect them to be excited and want to come home and do 2-3 hours of school work.
Teen years are supposed to be fun. There needs to be a better balance. I understand their attitude to be honest
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do any of you remember having HOURS of homework a day as a teen in high school? No because we didn't.
Why is it fair to push and push and push these kids. They go to school for 7 hours. Practice sports or extracurriculars for 2-3 hours more. Then we expect them to be excited and want to come home and do 2-3 hours of school work.
Teen years are supposed to be fun. There needs to be a better balance. I understand their attitude to be honest
Not the OP, but I think you are misreading this. Hours at the library with friends means not doing his work. He probably doesn't have hours of homework a day.
Anonymous wrote:Do any of you remember having HOURS of homework a day as a teen in high school? No because we didn't.
Why is it fair to push and push and push these kids. They go to school for 7 hours. Practice sports or extracurriculars for 2-3 hours more. Then we expect them to be excited and want to come home and do 2-3 hours of school work.
Teen years are supposed to be fun. There needs to be a better balance. I understand their attitude to be honest
Anonymous wrote:ya, welcome to teen hood. I have two teens: one is great about this kind of stuff; the other, not so much![]()
This is one area I do not want to allow for natural consequences. Grades are too important for college, but as long as their grades aren't suffering, then you just have to tune out their whining and blowups.
I try as much as possible to speak calmly to them and not blow up myself. Hard for me to do because I'm pretty high strung myself. Having kids has definitely made me try to be calmer.
I also find it really hard to not say, "I told you so" every 30minutes.