Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My first grader has a weekly planner. This helps. He usually has 6 pages of math, one book to read and write on, one short page to read and answer questions on, and 10 spelling words. He loves math and gets the 6 pages done in about30 min. The book was a fight for the first two months, but now he does it on his own rather quickly. It's all about making it part of a routine. It doesn't need to be fun or exciting.
For the record. This would not have been developmentally appropriate for my son at this age. Not every child can read in first. I do support some homework, particularly developmentally appropriate reading support, but your list would have killed us.
Said son does very well in school now (middle school). Not straight As, but more As than Bs.
Anonymous wrote:My first grader has a weekly planner. This helps. He usually has 6 pages of math, one book to read and write on, one short page to read and answer questions on, and 10 spelling words. He loves math and gets the 6 pages done in about30 min. The book was a fight for the first two months, but now he does it on his own rather quickly. It's all about making it part of a routine. It doesn't need to be fun or exciting.
Anonymous wrote:Does everything have to be about providing joy and pleasure to our kids? No wonder we are raising a self-centered generation that has the attention span of a flea. Sometimes life requires us to do "chores" that seem tedious when something we deem better is calling for our time. Learning anything requires practice. 2 pages of homework is not terrible. What a great life lesson to teach our kids when they're young - shirk the things you have to do in favor of the ones you want to do.
Anonymous wrote:DC is hating homework and the type and amount of homework is taking the joy out of math and reading. Just about everyday, its a fight to get through a minimal amount (2-3 pages of math/reading/writing). The teacher says to keep it fun and not do much, I'm thinking about dropping it all together and focusing on reading to DC, art, the outdoors, cooking, sports, etc. I just don't think DC's cognitive abilities are that developed yet while the other areas are, such as motor skills, emotional and social abilities, etc. Anyone else having similar experiences?