Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child's K teacher sends home books with a reading log and asks that the parent note whether it was read by child, parent, or together. I only log the books that she sends home, not other reading. There are 4 K classes in our school. I have no idea what's the other K teachers do or the level of compliance in the classroom.
Our teacher sends home books. We will do the homework but not read the books. They are too young for my child and boring.
And this is why some teachers do it and some don't.
If many of the children have no parent support at home, they don't send books/ homework for anyone in the class. I think this is a bad policy especially for those who will make sure it gets done. I think for the upper elementary grades it teaches responsibility as long as it's not overdone. If the homework is meaningful, it will be good practice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child's K teacher sends home books with a reading log and asks that the parent note whether it was read by child, parent, or together. I only log the books that she sends home, not other reading. There are 4 K classes in our school. I have no idea what's the other K teachers do or the level of compliance in the classroom.
Our teacher sends home books. We will do the homework but not read the books. They are too young for my child and boring.
And this is why some teachers do it and some don't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child's K teacher sends home books with a reading log and asks that the parent note whether it was read by child, parent, or together. I only log the books that she sends home, not other reading. There are 4 K classes in our school. I have no idea what's the other K teachers do or the level of compliance in the classroom.
Our teacher sends home books. We will do the homework but not read the books. They are too young for my child and boring.
And this is why some teachers do it and some don't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child's K teacher sends home books with a reading log and asks that the parent note whether it was read by child, parent, or together. I only log the books that she sends home, not other reading. There are 4 K classes in our school. I have no idea what's the other K teachers do or the level of compliance in the classroom.
Our teacher sends home books. We will do the homework but not read the books. They are too young for my child and boring.
Anonymous wrote:My child's K teacher sends home books with a reading log and asks that the parent note whether it was read by child, parent, or together. I only log the books that she sends home, not other reading. There are 4 K classes in our school. I have no idea what's the other K teachers do or the level of compliance in the classroom.
Anonymous wrote:I teach K and LOVE that our school has a no homework policy in K. I loathe dealing with homework.
Anonymous wrote:Simple reason! (And I teach first grade, fwiw). If the school has an abundance of leveled readers, it isn't a big deal to send them home, knowing that they may not come back, or come back damaged. If the school is tighter on funds, they have much smaller of a pool of leveled readers to draw from, and need to save them for instruction with other groups, and can't risk them not being returned.