Anonymous wrote:Did you ever email a high school teacher and asked them to stop giving homework?
Anonymous wrote:Don’t have a particular dog in this fight, but as a foreigner this thread really confirms my view that America is in a spiral of anti-intellectualism and race-to-the-bottom in the education of its citizens. It’s hard for me to believe that students can master high level reading and math with little outside of school, independent effort, or to think they can be prepared for higher education when their after school activities consist of sports and YouTube. But what do I know…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you ever email a high school teacher and asked them to stop giving homework?
No. I want homework to be mandatory for grd 3-12,
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whatever happened to "practice makes perfect?"
Isn’t it “Perfect practice makes perfect”? If the child is incorrectly practicing math hw for example, won’t that just make it more difficult to undo the misunderstanding?
But, if he turns in the homework, the teacher will see the problem.
That happens during the school day. The student has the problem and the reacher is there to intervene or meet in small group. Doing it incorrectly at home just makes it more cemented and more difficult to correct.
True in elementary school, high school is a different story.
Anonymous wrote:Did you ever email a high school teacher and asked them to stop giving homework?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whatever happened to "practice makes perfect?"
Isn’t it “Perfect practice makes perfect”? If the child is incorrectly practicing math hw for example, won’t that just make it more difficult to undo the misunderstanding?
But, if he turns in the homework, the teacher will see the problem.
That happens during the school day. The student has the problem and the reacher is there to intervene or meet in small group. Doing it incorrectly at home just makes it more cemented and more difficult to correct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whatever happened to "practice makes perfect?"
Isn’t it “Perfect practice makes perfect”? If the child is incorrectly practicing math hw for example, won’t that just make it more difficult to undo the misunderstanding?
But, if he turns in the homework, the teacher will see the problem.
That happens during the school day. The student has the problem and the reacher is there to intervene or meet in small group. Doing it incorrectly at home just makes it more cemented and more difficult to correct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whatever happened to "practice makes perfect?"
Isn’t it “Perfect practice makes perfect”? If the child is incorrectly practicing math hw for example, won’t that just make it more difficult to undo the misunderstanding?
But, if he turns in the homework, the teacher will see the problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1Anonymous wrote:No. We need to go the opposite direction and restore it in ES and MS.
I agree! Restore homework, especially in upper ES and in MS!
If MS students had 20-30 minutes of homework for each class they take each day, they'd only have 60-90 minutes of homework each night because they only take 4 classes each day, and certain classes (PE and Mascot Time) do not have homework. So even if a kid had a tough schedule (four core classes in one day), that means their other day is much easier, so they can split the homework up over the two days.
The schools not giving homework is contributing to the laziness of this generation.
4 x 30 is 120 minutes aka 2 hours. You want 12-14 year old kids to spend upwards of 8 hrs per week on homework?
Do most MS kids have enough other things going on that an hour or two of HW a day instead of Insta/TikTok/YouTube is going to be problematic? That should not be a problem for mine, as long as the weekend can be used for doing the work as well.
Anonymous wrote:Kids don’t have enough time on their video games and other electronic devices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1Anonymous wrote:No. We need to go the opposite direction and restore it in ES and MS.
I agree! Restore homework, especially in upper ES and in MS!
If MS students had 20-30 minutes of homework for each class they take each day, they'd only have 60-90 minutes of homework each night because they only take 4 classes each day, and certain classes (PE and Mascot Time) do not have homework. So even if a kid had a tough schedule (four core classes in one day), that means their other day is much easier, so they can split the homework up over the two days.
The schools not giving homework is contributing to the laziness of this generation.
4 x 30 is 120 minutes aka 2 hours. You want 12-14 year old kids to spend upwards of 8 hrs per week on homework?