Bullshit. My parents were never involved in our homework (and there was no elementary homework) and my family produced 3 lawyers 1 banker and 1 engineer. The need for homewok to create a "school-home partnership" is completely made up and unsupported by any kind of evidence. For advantaged families like mine, it makes no difference. For disadvantaged families is misses the point or at worst creates additional divisions.
Are you basing that on the sample size of you and your siblings, or do you have additional research demonstrating that there is no benefit from a home school partnership?
Do you have any research demonstrating that there is a benefit to a "home/school partnership", and that homework supports this "home/school partnership"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
As long as homework is in fact reinforcement of what's being learned in school then it's valuable and can he considered parental involvement if done together or even if a parent just checks it when it's done. The parent is involved in creating a home-school partnership, which is important for children to see.
I honestly don't understand where this idea of the "home-school partnership" with parent involvement comes from. It was absolutely not the expectation in my middle-class, academic, Midwestern, public-school experience in the 1970s and 1980s.
Expectations are different now than when we were growing up. Because most kids in families on this board will get help if needed from parents, if your child never gets help their materials will look markedly different. Also, you are talking about a different situation/time. Its one thing not to have homework assigned and say you came out ok without it. That's a different situation than having homework assigned and just not doing it. There may be negative consequences from that attitude that have nothing to do with the actual homework. That said, I don't think the homework of my first grader is particularly helpful (helps me stay in touch with what he's doing), but I also don't think it's harmful. And I confess, it is not the homework that prevents us from building a compost.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
As long as homework is in fact reinforcement of what's being learned in school then it's valuable and can he considered parental involvement if done together or even if a parent just checks it when it's done. The parent is involved in creating a home-school partnership, which is important for children to see.
I honestly don't understand where this idea of the "home-school partnership" with parent involvement comes from. It was absolutely not the expectation in my middle-class, academic, Midwestern, public-school experience in the 1970s and 1980s.
Anonymous wrote:
Bullshit. My parents were never involved in our homework (and there was no elementary homework) and my family produced 3 lawyers 1 banker and 1 engineer. The need for homewok to create a "school-home partnership" is completely made up and unsupported by any kind of evidence. For advantaged families like mine, it makes no difference. For disadvantaged families is misses the point or at worst creates additional divisions.
Are you basing that on the sample size of you and your siblings, or do you have additional research demonstrating that there is no benefit from a home school partnership?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
As long as homework is in fact reinforcement of what's being learned in school then it's valuable and can he considered parental involvement if done together or even if a parent just checks it when it's done. The parent is involved in creating a home-school partnership, which is important for children to see.
I honestly don't understand where this idea of the "home-school partnership" with parent involvement comes from. It was absolutely not the expectation in my middle-class, academic, Midwestern, public-school experience in the 1970s and 1980s.
And, I bet your parents never told you to forget about your homework, either.
Bullshit. My parents were never involved in our homework (and there was no elementary homework) and my family produced 3 lawyers 1 banker and 1 engineer. The need for homewok to create a "school-home partnership" is completely made up and unsupported by any kind of evidence. For advantaged families like mine, it makes no difference. For disadvantaged families is misses the point or at worst creates additional divisions.
Anonymous wrote:
As long as homework is in fact reinforcement of what's being learned in school then it's valuable and can he considered parental involvement if done together or even if a parent just checks it when it's done. The parent is involved in creating a home-school partnership, which is important for children to see.
Anonymous wrote:The thing is that not all parents are using time after school to create compost bins. Some families (children and adults) won't reinforce what's learned in school unless it's a requirement (i.e. homework). It's just the reality. And no school or teacher will say "Larla, your parents take you to museums and build compost bins after school--no homework for you. Larlo, your parents let you stay up late to watch TV and play video games--you need to do math and reading homework tonight."
And there is time after school for both reinforcing what's being taught in school (homework) and building a compost bin. The two are not mutually exclusive.
As long as homework is in fact reinforcement of what's being learned in school then it's valuable and can he considered parental involvement if done together or even if a parent just checks it when it's done. The parent is involved in creating a home-school partnership, which is important for children to see.
Anonymous wrote:Here is what I don't understand, because my child is not in school yet, if the homework is so simple to be meaningless, can't it be completed very quickly?
As someone who had to make a paper mâché map of Vermont in fourth grade, it seems to me that meaningless homework projects have been around for a long time.
iAnonymous wrote:Here is what I don't understand, because my child is not in school yet, if the homework is so simple to be meaningless, can't it be completed very quickly?
As someone who had to make a paper mâché map of Vermont in fourth grade, it seems to me that meaningless homework projects have been around for a long time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:it should be done in school.Anonymous wrote:The homework for my second grader in MCPS usually consists of math equations and writing. I don't think it is a waste of time.
Homework is reinforcement of what's being done in school. It allows people to see what and how their kids are doing with what's being taught during the school day.
Or is it that you're just too lazy to ensure that your kids do the homework? You must be one of those parents who think that all parenting responsibilities should be provided by school staff between 9am and 3pm daily so that you can "enjoy" your evenings.
+100
Plus, who are these people to presume to know so much better than the teacher what's necessary or not?
No - school is for school. Home time is for family values. And please repeat with me again: research shows no benefit for early elementary homework.
LMAO! No benefit, my ass... I don't really give a rats ass about whatever flawed "research" you want to point to, because the empirical evidence is everywhere. A huge number of kids learn to read, learn their numbers, shapes, colors, et cetera thanks in large part to reinforcing school values at home in those early elementary years. In homes where that doesn't happen you end up having huge issues with basic foundational skills like literacy and numeracy - which are best learned starting in early elementary years.
Anonymous wrote:The thing is that not all parents are using time after school to create compost bins. Some families (children and adults) won't reinforce what's learned in school unless it's a requirement (i.e. homework). It's just the reality. And no school or teacher will say "Larla, your parents take you to museums and build compost bins after school--no homework for you. Larlo, your parents let you stay up late to watch TV and play video games--you need to do math and reading homework tonight."
And there is time after school for both reinforcing what's being taught in school (homework) and building a compost bin. The two are not mutually exclusive.
As long as homework is in fact reinforcement of what's being learned in school then it's valuable and can he considered parental involvement if done together or even if a parent just checks it when it's done. The parent is involved in creating a home-school partnership, which is important for children to see.