Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any system that requires 3-4 hrs of homework per night needs to be fixed. I plan to limit the number of AP classes my kids take because I don't think kids should spend 3-4 hrs per day on homework after spending 6.5 hours in school. I see this as a race to nowhere. I hope at some point the school system will figure this out and cut back on the expected homework. I think sometimes teachers look at the homework they assign in isolation without considering what all the other teachers are also expecting.
Yes, please don't let your kids waste an AP course seat that could go to a motivated student.
Anonymous wrote:Any system that requires 3-4 hrs of homework per night needs to be fixed. I plan to limit the number of AP classes my kids take because I don't think kids should spend 3-4 hrs per day on homework after spending 6.5 hours in school. I see this as a race to nowhere. I hope at some point the school system will figure this out and cut back on the expected homework. I think sometimes teachers look at the homework they assign in isolation without considering what all the other teachers are also expecting.
Anonymous wrote:Any system that requires 3-4 hrs of homework per night needs to be fixed. I plan to limit the number of AP classes my kids take because I don't think kids should spend 3-4 hrs per day on homework after spending 6.5 hours in school. I see this as a race to nowhere. I hope at some point the school system will figure this out and cut back on the expected homework. I think sometimes teachers look at the homework they assign in isolation without considering what all the other teachers are also expecting.
AP and IB courses are supposed to be COLLEGE level courses ... I can't think of any college course where I didn't do outside reading/studying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, what state had that system?
I'd like to know this too. Sounds like a great system.
Anonymous wrote:OP, what state had that system?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any system that requires 3-4 hrs of homework per night needs to be fixed. I plan to limit the number of AP classes my kids take because I don't think kids should spend 3-4 hrs per day on homework after spending 6.5 hours in school. I see this as a race to nowhere. I hope at some point the school system will figure this out and cut back on the expected homework. I think sometimes teachers look at the homework they assign in isolation without considering what all the other teachers are also expecting.
Oh I don't think the highly selective colleges are "nowhere." They expect the most rigorous coursework possible. Of course if a kid can ace those without doing homework, more power to him/her.
Anonymous wrote:Any system that requires 3-4 hrs of homework per night needs to be fixed. I plan to limit the number of AP classes my kids take because I don't think kids should spend 3-4 hrs per day on homework after spending 6.5 hours in school. I see this as a race to nowhere. I hope at some point the school system will figure this out and cut back on the expected homework. I think sometimes teachers look at the homework they assign in isolation without considering what all the other teachers are also expecting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your plan is to teach your kids that they only need to do the bare minimum to get by, and extra effort is a waste of time...congrats. You're successfully raising kids with absolutely no work ethic.
I'm not sure that you, and the other pps who are saying OP's kids will have no work ethic, know what that means. Work ethic is going to work and doing a good job there. It's not being on your blackberry 24/7, doing more work after the kids are in bed, bringing your work along on vacation, etc.
People are concerned that high school students in this area are overstressed. Then they say that high school students who choose not to do 4-5 hours of homework every night are slackers who will never go to a "good" college and have absolutely no work ethic. There's huge cognitive dissonance here.
Anonymous wrote:If your plan is to teach your kids that they only need to do the bare minimum to get by, and extra effort is a waste of time...congrats. You're successfully raising kids with absolutely no work ethic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Congrats, they think rules don't apply to them. Good luck getting them to pay their taxes.
A's and B's may not be good enough to get into a good college. Of course if all you aspire to is somewhere like JMU, you should be o.k.,
Oh, can it.
low expectations, sub-par results. College acceptance is so competitive, but I have heard there is one for everybody; i.e., the right "fit" and all. I wonder which school is the right fit for kids who choose which homework they will and will not do? Maybe put this on your application essay - why I picked and chose which homework I would do.?
Anonymous wrote:I never assign homework for practice, only for preparation for the next day's lesson (flipped classroom) so I would be troubled by a student ignoring this. However, if you feel your kids are only assigned busy work, challenge the benefit of the specific assignments.