Anonymous wrote:
Not to worry you, but procrastination and stalling are classic signs of ADHD. I did that as a teen overloaded with homework, DH still does it all the time for everything, and DS too.
DD is the only who is NOT diagnosed and - surprise - blasts through her assignments!
I would learn about ADHD and observe your son carefully.
Anonymous wrote:
Not to worry you, but procrastination and stalling are classic signs of ADHD. I did that as a teen overloaded with homework, DH still does it all the time for everything, and DS too.
DD is the only who is NOT diagnosed and - surprise - blasts through her assignments!
I would learn about ADHD and observe your son carefully.
Anonymous wrote:OP Here. Commiseration please.
MP ends in a week and a half.
Between now and then, there are five tests (I could have guessed, but he did not), three projects, a group project, and two writing assignments. That's on top of the usual day-to-day.
The challenge: get my son through this with our relationship intact.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Homework seems so insidious to me. With my middle schoolers each discreet task doesn't seem so big (10 math problems -fine), but with7 subjects it adds up! Are the teachers not coordinating on this, do they not realize how long it actually takes? And the $64,000 question is: do the child free teachers understand how busy and full home life is, especially with multiple kids in the house?
Short answer? No. The principal of the high school my daughter went Freshman year was under the impression that the 2.5 hours of homework average the county recommended for high schoolers was per subject. I made him add up the number of hours of homework per class based on that rule, plus the number of hours the average kid spends on the bus and in classes. Then I had him add the number of hours they were recommending the kids sleep as per their happy posters on the wall. He came up with 26.5 hours. I then asked him where he was buying his time portal for the schools, as I wanted to get one myself.
There was total silence in that auditorium full of parents, then one by one hands went up, with parents asking how he came to this conclusion and what he was going to do about it.
I moved my kid to private. Problem solved...for us.
Anonymous wrote:Homework seems so insidious to me. With my middle schoolers each discreet task doesn't seem so big (10 math problems -fine), but with7 subjects it adds up! Are the teachers not coordinating on this, do they not realize how long it actually takes? And the $64,000 question is: do the child free teachers understand how busy and full home life is, especially with multiple kids in the house?