Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We've never gotten any significant homework from FCPS. Just read for xx minutes or a couple worksheets. We've had to supplement the whole time.
Why do you feel you need to supplement homework? I'm genuinely curious. I'm in the "less hw is better" camp.
Anonymous wrote:We've never gotten any significant homework from FCPS. Just read for xx minutes or a couple worksheets. We've had to supplement the whole time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had a ton of homework in K. We couldn't keep up with it. There was a calendar full of useless activities, a reading log, 4 or 5 worksheets a week, and one "big" thing every two or three weeks, like a large poster to make or a presentation to prepare.
This is also what we had, but with 2-3 worksheets per week (some quite involved and requiring a spinner), weekly reading log, and a larger craft project due every couple of weeks. It wasn't unmanageable but more than we expected for K.
Then why not opt your kid out of it. Homework was pretty optional through second grade in our house, particularly after I saw how little outdoor time they gave my sons (canceling recess for behavioral issues was common). They're now in high school and college with no negative effects as far as I can tell.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had a ton of homework in K. We couldn't keep up with it. There was a calendar full of useless activities, a reading log, 4 or 5 worksheets a week, and one "big" thing every two or three weeks, like a large poster to make or a presentation to prepare.
This is also what we had, but with 2-3 worksheets per week (some quite involved and requiring a spinner), weekly reading log, and a larger craft project due every couple of weeks. It wasn't unmanageable but more than we expected for K.
Anonymous wrote:We had a ton of homework in K. We couldn't keep up with it. There was a calendar full of useless activities, a reading log, 4 or 5 worksheets a week, and one "big" thing every two or three weeks, like a large poster to make or a presentation to prepare.
Anonymous wrote:Our principal asked parents to read "rethinking homework" and adopted a no homework policy for k-6.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At out fcps school, the kindergarten homework was a calendar with suggested activities and 20 were do by the end of each month. But they were mostly fun stuff. Play with a friend, take a nature walk, read with your family. Write your name in different colors, that sort of thing. There was no pressure. Just do what you can handle. Reading daily is sort of a given.
That's about the same for my school too. Many of the older classes don't even get a lot of homework. It's been cut back quite a bit recently.
Anonymous wrote:At out fcps school, the kindergarten homework was a calendar with suggested activities and 20 were do by the end of each month. But they were mostly fun stuff. Play with a friend, take a nature walk, read with your family. Write your name in different colors, that sort of thing. There was no pressure. Just do what you can handle. Reading daily is sort of a given.