Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is sucks. It will dumb everyone down.Two ways to close the achievement gap: from the top or from the bottom. Guess we know which way this one works.![]()
It's not dumbing anyone down. Because homework at home in elementary school does nothing to help kids learn by any substantive measure. Study after study confirms this.
this is really not true. the most comprehensive review of the matter says that if the homework is focused on skills, it helps reinforce learning. The problem is with low income family that may not have a caregiver that can help to reinforce learning happened in school. another issue is some homework is high effort and low learning, meaning all. those art-based poster project etc in higher grades.[/quote
What's the cite?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you people care whether other parents have their kids do homework or not? You sound like children yourselves. Mind your own business.
Exactly! Focus on your family and the things you control/influence over.
Still waiting to hear why people care whether other parents have their kids do homework. After all these pages on the topic, I'm thinking it's because they want to feel better about their own choice to do homework.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you people care whether other parents have their kids do homework or not? You sound like children yourselves. Mind your own business.
Exactly! Focus on your family and the things you control/influence over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is sucks. It will dumb everyone down.Two ways to close the achievement gap: from the top or from the bottom. Guess we know which way this one works.![]()
It's not dumbing anyone down. Because homework at home in elementary school does nothing to help kids learn by any substantive measure. Study after study confirms this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is sucks. It will dumb everyone down.Two ways to close the achievement gap: from the top or from the bottom. Guess we know which way this one works.![]()
It's not dumbing anyone down. Because homework at home in elementary school does nothing to help kids learn by any substantive measure. Study after study confirms this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is sucks. It will dumb everyone down.Two ways to close the achievement gap: from the top or from the bottom. Guess we know which way this one works.![]()
It's not dumbing anyone down. Because homework at home in elementary school does nothing to help kids learn by any substantive measure. Study after study confirms this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doing homework at home has helped my son tremendously. He's in 1st. When we do his spelling we quiz him first on the words. On Monday he knows maybe 25% and that's after the spelling packet they do in class on Monday. We have him write and spell the wrong ones 5 times. We do this everyday of the week until Friday. He usually get 100% or one wrong on Friday's test. I'm not sure how else he would learn the words if we didn't work on them at home. Same thing with his math and English.
He missed doing one of his religion assignments and came home upset because they discuses the assignment in class and he didn't have his. (It was left sitting on the kitchen table) For those who don't do homework, how what does your kid say if they go over it in class?
Don't they practice them at school throughout the week as well? Mine does.
Anonymous wrote:This is sucks. It will dumb everyone down.Two ways to close the achievement gap: from the top or from the bottom. Guess we know which way this one works.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Doing homework at home has helped my son tremendously. He's in 1st. When we do his spelling we quiz him first on the words. On Monday he knows maybe 25% and that's after the spelling packet they do in class on Monday. We have him write and spell the wrong ones 5 times. We do this everyday of the week until Friday. He usually get 100% or one wrong on Friday's test. I'm not sure how else he would learn the words if we didn't work on them at home. Same thing with his math and English.
He missed doing one of his religion assignments and came home upset because they discuses the assignment in class and he didn't have his. (It was left sitting on the kitchen table) For those who don't do homework, how what does your kid say if they go over it in class?
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.