Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Serious question: Are there any MS/HS options in DC that offer both a sharp, engaged peer group and a light-to-manageable homework load?
Most schools have minimum core requirements. If somebody stuck to the minimum and forgo AP classes they would have less homework. But everybody is afraid to do that in fear of going to a lesser college.
I took lots of APs, got 5s on everything, and did maybe -- MAYBE -- ten hours of homework a week, all in. I can't believe that a similar course load today really *requires* 2-3 times that.
Well good for you. But the private big three I went to did not allow that. If you had only spent two hours a night on homework, you would have only finished half your homework a night and been crucified by the teachers and counseled out. Many kids are assigned four to five hour of homework a night, with even more to do over the weekend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Serious question: Are there any MS/HS options in DC that offer both a sharp, engaged peer group and a light-to-manageable homework load?
Most schools have minimum core requirements. If somebody stuck to the minimum and forgo AP classes they would have less homework. But everybody is afraid to do that in fear of going to a lesser college.
I took lots of APs, got 5s on everything, and did maybe -- MAYBE -- ten hours of homework a week, all in. I can't believe that a similar course load today really *requires* 2-3 times that.
Well good for you. But the private big three I went to did not allow that. If you had only spent two hours a night on homework, you would have only finished half your homework a night and been crucified by the teachers and counseled out. Many kids are assigned four to five hour of homework a night, with even more to do over the weekend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whats interesting is the overwhelming number of posts here saying there's too much homework, which is pretty much what I hear from all parents. So why is this happening? Who is supporting it?
There are some parents on this thread that don't think 3 hours is too much and they just think kids are busy on social media, exercise too much and spend too much time volunteering and that is the problem.
If they would just stop doing sports and helping others the hw problem will go away.
I don't think three hours of homework is too much for a high school student. If an elementary school student is getting that much homework, I would agree.
The research shows American students are spending more screen time and doing less work than ever before (the numbers on college students are staggering). I am sympathetic to the poster whose kids are in public school and have homework in seven courses that is limiting them to an unhealthy amount of sleep -- that sounds terrible and perhaps is linked to the NCLB driven test frenzy?
However, as someone with kids in independent schools who taught in independent schools at the high school level a generation ago, I can tell you that the amount of homework does not appear to have increased. Same general amount of reading assigned in the English classes (and if anything, shorter English papers), same general amount of math homework, etc. What has increased is outside sports commitment (an athletic kid used to have his/her school team, now there is a club apparatus for almost all sports than can take up a tremendous amount of time, including on weekends); an increased anxiety about college admissions that appears to leave teenagers and parents thinking they need to be experts in a multiplicity of areas; and, yes, "screen time" -- just think honestly about how distracting the internet/cellphone/computer is for grown adults and then think back to what you would have done as a teenager with that magical device, the cell phone.
High school students who are able to use their time efficiently (and I'm not judging, I was a bit of a social gabber in high school myself) can generally knock off an hour or more of work during the school day and/or before school sports begin, and if they work efficiently at home and use the weekend to do some work (reading ahead for English and history, for example), there's no need for staying up to ungodly hours. But yeah, high school kids are not always efficient, and they want to hang out or get a snack before practice, and they want to chill out on the weekend because they are tired out from an admittedly fast-paced week. But, at least in the independent school world (can't speak to kids in public school carrying seven homework-assigning classes), to my relatively experienced eye it's not the schools that have changed in terms of homeowrk, it's the additional demands and distractions that have been added to the kids' lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Serious question: Are there any MS/HS options in DC that offer both a sharp, engaged peer group and a light-to-manageable homework load?
Most schools have minimum core requirements. If somebody stuck to the minimum and forgo AP classes they would have less homework. But everybody is afraid to do that in fear of going to a lesser college.
I took lots of APs, got 5s on everything, and did maybe -- MAYBE -- ten hours of homework a week, all in. I can't believe that a similar course load today really *requires* 2-3 times that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whats interesting is the overwhelming number of posts here saying there's too much homework, which is pretty much what I hear from all parents. So why is this happening? Who is supporting it?
There are some parents on this thread that don't think 3 hours is too much and they just think kids are busy on social media, exercise too much and spend too much time volunteering and that is the problem.
If they would just stop doing sports and helping others the hw problem will go away.
Anonymous wrote:Whats interesting is the overwhelming number of posts here saying there's too much homework, which is pretty much what I hear from all parents. So why is this happening? Who is supporting it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look for half of DCUM to discredit him because he smoked weed at the end.
Who didn't smoke it?
Anonymous wrote:Look for half of DCUM to discredit him because he smoked weed at the end.
Anonymous wrote:you are supposed to tell us what you think first. otherwise, you are in violation of TOS.
Anonymous wrote:Whats interesting is the overwhelming number of posts here saying there's too much homework, which is pretty much what I hear from all parents. So why is this happening? Who is supporting it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not true. ^^ I find it very frustrating that whenever the subject of TOO MUCH HOMEWORK comes up, someone - usually a male voice who wasn't much help to his wife when the kids were growing up and now enjoys beating people up on the internet as a retirement hobby - makes this remarks about 'screens". Sorry, 18:36 is that is not your demographic. But it is a pattern and in so many cases it is simply not true. In our household we have rigid screens, phone, Iphone and computer rules. NO TV during the school week etc. Homework comes first. But the kids are still going to bed at midnight and getting up at 5:30 and it has nothing to do with screens or phones. Sorry 18:36 for the vent, but I'm tired of this prattle every time a serious poster compalins about too much homework. Too much homework has ruined our homelife, our kids' lives, and our ability to enjoy and do a lot of activities.
Well, you got my demographic wrong -- woman, of childbearing years, lol, AND I'm in the workforce! And sorry, your rhetoric -- homework that has ruined your homelife and kids' lives?! -- sounds, shall we say, overheated.
On a more serious note, if your children are getting only 5.5 hours of sleep a night they are either (a) over-committed to activities; (b) in a school that is too hard for them and you should re-assess; and/or (c) are putting too much pressure on themselves to be perfect, whether or not you are putting on such pressure.