Battling against homework

Last week, the Guardian published an article about a Canadian couple who launched and won a court case to exempt their children from completing homework ‘after successfully arguing there is no clear evidence it improves academic performance’.

The article explains that ”Sherri and Tom Milley, two lawyers from Calgary, Alberta, launched their highly unusual case after years of struggling to make their three reluctant children do school work out of the classroom.

After waging a long war with their eldest son, Jay, now 18, over his homework, they decided to do things differently with their youngest two, Spencer, 11, and Brittany, 10. And being lawyers, they decided to make it official.

It took two years to negotiate the Milleys’ Differentiated Homework Plan, which ensures their youngest two children will never have to do homework again at their current school. The two-page plan, signed by the children, parents and teachers, stipulates that “homework will not be used as a form of evaluation for the children”. In return, the pupils promise to get their work done in class, to come to school prepared, and to revise for tests. They must also read daily and practise their musical instruments at home.”

How do you feel about homework? Do all of your children complete it? What benefits does it have?

In my experience, lots of children return homework but there are always some who don’t return it and it takes lots of time to chase them up and then organise the next set of differentiated work to go home. I would love to hear your opinions in the comments below…

Image – introspection

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  • http://cristinaluminea.blogspot.com Cristina

    I am not a teacher but I believe homework is really important. It provides practice of the things the child learned in school.

    When I was young my parents would actually give me extra maths homework than the one from school. I hated it at the time but I ended up loving maths because of it.

  • http://www.fernandezhistoryclass.com Fernandezc4

    Homework is only effective when parents are involved and check to make sure there was understanding of the home work assignment and content.

    Have we forgotten the importance of repetition?

  • http://www.bushchild.wordpress.com bushchild

    As a full time teacher and mother of three primary age kids, I am ineffably grateful that their school took the decision some years ago not to bother with anything much in the way of homework.
    I can see that it is useful for parents, in that it gives some sort of impression of what the school expects your child to be able to do- and it’s probably useful for children to learn the discipline of organising time and getting things done when other people say you have to- but in terms of actual progress or learning: pointless. In fact worse than pointless if it stops you being able to go out and do all sorts of other fun stuff because you are stuck at home wrestling with the stupid homework.
    “Ah”, I hear you say ” But not all children are taken out to do fun stuff…”
    “Yes, that’s true, but I’ll bet you nobody bothers to get them to do their homework either”- well that’s my experience in the classroom- and then they miss their play or their afterschool club because they’re in a detention, doing the homework which it was so crucial they did at home…
    Makes no sense to me.
    Let’s ban it.

  • gotchasam

    I agree with bushchild. My son is 11 and we have constant battles with him to do his homework. when he comes home from school he is tired, hungry and just wants to be himself. He certainly does not want myself or his father going on at him repeatedly to do his homework. Children are at school from age 4 to 16, that is 12 years of constant pressure to perform well in school as well as do homework. then we parents expect them to attend college or university which can be another 2 to 4 years of learning and homework. So our children in total of 16 years will be forced to do homework or piontless lessons that they will not need by the time they go to work and only 4 years to from birth to age 4 to discover themselves.

    Let children be and ban homework..


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