Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No second grader should be doing 40 minutes of homework.
If they really like their activities, they have to do HW at SACC. If they don’t like their activities, drop them.
You cook in batches on the weekend, so weekday dinners are reheating and salads.
Your kids do not go to bed at 8pm.
This is how it works.
20 minutes reading, 20 minutes math and writing
They are happy to do it in SACC, but between Snack and mandatory outside time, they lose almost half an hour before they can settle down to work, then we arrive and whisk them home — too many transitions.
We do reading at bedtime. Just push the bedtime a bit early. Kids settle in bed and read.
We have a reluctant reader, needs to be at desk with light to focus. Loves being read to at bedtime.
Anonymous wrote:I second PP who thinks there are way too many after school activities for OP's kids. I would move the activities to the weekend where possible. My DC has been taking piano lessons on Sunday afternoons for five years. I don't think we would have done it for this long if it was on week nights. If week night activities become stressful, it's time to pare it down. Choose one maybe. Either sports or scouts, not both.
Anonymous wrote:I don't allow my kids to do homework until 7th grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can they do homework in the morning?
Four nights of activities is a lot, too.
Part of it is multiple kids and different activities per kid (age gap)
Generally just 3, but we only have 4 nights to do homework so Fri activity is free anyways.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much damn homework?
My 4th grade son is in the GT program and can get his done in 15 minutes.
It’s usually a math sheet and reading comprehension or writing.
He sometimes chooses to do it in the morning.
Omg, our 4th grade Gt has elaborate projects, fairly involved project lite weekly homework
It’s cool seeing how much they accomplish on their own, but deadlines can mean late late nights bc of the fragmented weeknight times.
Same poster. Do they give time in Class? Our school always does and both my boys do a great deal (if not all) of their projects during the free time. They knew if they did this they wouldn't have to do it at home. They also knew to do it on sports nights.
Ask your kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much damn homework?
My 4th grade son is in the GT program and can get his done in 15 minutes.
It’s usually a math sheet and reading comprehension or writing.
He sometimes chooses to do it in the morning.
Omg, our 4th grade Gt has elaborate projects, fairly involved project lite weekly homework
It’s cool seeing how much they accomplish on their own, but deadlines can mean late late nights bc of the fragmented weeknight times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Can you afford an afternoon sitter who will pick up the kids, do snack and homework, perhaps cook dinner?
My friends paid for a college student to do this for their daughter.
We probably need this. How do you find them? Sitter city?