Anonymous wrote:He is not into structure or rules at 6 years old? Yikes, you have a long road ahead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t force him to do homework, but I also wouldn’t let him use any screens. If he wants to not do homework, and run around outside, play do puzzles, help cook, etc. great. If he wants to just sit around on a iPad, no.
I see this frequently…kids don’t want to do anything that takes them away from their screens. If they kid never has a screen in the first place, they will be far more likely to do homework, reading with you or other academic-based work when you ask.
My ADHD kid had zero screens at age 6 and he still did what OP's son is doing. The homework refusal was a red flag for problems that increased with age. But like PPs said, some kids grow up and grow into homework.
OP for now, +1 you should keep your DS away from screens. With homework, communicate with the teacher, wait and watch.
Anonymous wrote:I live in Ontario where homework is generally not given to early elementary children. My kids are now in middle/high school and they are excelling. Homework at age 6 has absolutely no impact on how kids do later on. My husband is Scandinavian and academics don't even start until age 7. He has a PhD and is very successful professionally. I think you should just let your 6-year-old play and be a little kid, read every day, and forget about the worksheets.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t force him to do homework, but I also wouldn’t let him use any screens. If he wants to not do homework, and run around outside, play do puzzles, help cook, etc. great. If he wants to just sit around on a iPad, no.
I see this frequently…kids don’t want to do anything that takes them away from their screens. If they kid never has a screen in the first place, they will be far more likely to do homework, reading with you or other academic-based work when you ask.
Anonymous wrote:Our kid also totally refuses and a worksheet that would be 10 minutes ends up taking an hour plus. It's brutal.
We are working with a child psychologist for anxiety and we asked her thoughts on it. She says homework in elementary should only be for the practice of getting used to doing homework and we shouldn't push it. She says to set a timer for 20 minutes for homework. Whatever is accomplished in that time is the homework we do. Just let the teacher know you're using that approach and they can see what is being accomplished in 20 minutes. Timer really helps my kid
Anonymous wrote:I'll disagree with most on this. But I think structure and rules are important. I'd say, he comes home, has his snack, then it's homework until it is done. Yes, it's painful for you both when he resists. It may take a long time. But set up a good habit.
When kids are crushing it in school when they are older, we are so quick to describe them as "so smart" when their success is mostly coming from hard work. That's what's hard to come by. That's what's missing in so many kids.
Sorry to all who don't see it this way, but I would push it. Try to be as patient and loving as possible, but explain that some responsibility comes with going to school and this is your expectation.... or don't! It's your family, just sharing my perspective. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t force him to do homework, but I also wouldn’t let him use any screens. If he wants to not do homework, and run around outside, play do puzzles, help cook, etc. great. If he wants to just sit around on a iPad, no.
I see this frequently…kids don’t want to do anything that takes them away from their screens. If they kid never has a screen in the first place, they will be far more likely to do homework, reading with you or other academic-based work when you ask.
Anonymous wrote:He is not into structure or rules at 6 years old? Yikes, you have a long road ahead.