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Sharon wrote on Oct 17, 2008 12:37 PM:
funnyme wrote on Oct 17, 2008 2:46 PM:
I agree the "language and methods" I learned are different now, I am fortunate enough to have my 7th grader help my 4th grader. And most of the times they both have started or even finished homework at school during a class so if there were questions more likely they were answered and clarified already.
I believe the trick -at least in our household- is to go straight to the kitchen table as soon as we come home after school and FINISH the homework while eating a snack or sometimes an "early dinner" because there are soccer practices, volleyball clinics or swim team to go to after.
Ah...another thing that makes it easier is that we DON'T WATCH TV!
We unsubscribe to our cable 11 years ago. It's worth it! Computer time is "free for all" after homework is done..some nights we trade computer time for a movie (as a reward). "
winemd wrote on Oct 17, 2008 4:20 PM:
My 6th grade daughter has a LOT of homework and even more activities than my son. He wants to play with friends more than anything, and I am fine with that. He does one sport activity and one music lesson. My daughter has some activity 7 days a week, and more subjects with homework in 6th grade. She seems to be doing okay with it, but if it gets to be too much, we will drop some of the activities off the list. Some end in early November anyway, so that will help.
My son goes to Homework Club after school to do homework and gets it done before we come home.
I couldn't agree more about the TV. We cancelled cable 6 years ago. We watch moveis on the weekends. "
diehard4ever wrote on Oct 17, 2008 7:32 PM:
Sharon-
What school does your daughter/son go to? Redwood MS just started the "block scheduling, meaning we only have two "core" classes per day and two days to complete the homework. It works great and the teachers have more time to really "teach" us the material so we really get it. It's a great scheduling system and I suggest all schools switch to it. "
napadad wrote on Oct 19, 2008 12:54 PM:
GerryKP wrote on Oct 20, 2008 11:20 AM:
noblindershere wrote on Oct 21, 2008 6:53 AM:
Sharon wrote on Oct 21, 2008 7:47 AM:
sammy wrote on Oct 21, 2008 8:22 AM:
proudusamom wrote on Oct 21, 2008 11:35 AM:
busynapamom wrote on Oct 21, 2008 4:22 PM:
Maya wrote on Oct 22, 2008 7:22 AM:
pharper wrote on Oct 22, 2008 1:22 PM:
One thing I've found that makes it easier to do homework is doing it one subject at a time. I'll do Government homework first, then take a break, then my Administration of Justice homework, take a break, and then do Art homework or whatever else. It makes it seem less overwhelming, and spreads it out so I'm not spending one huge chunk of time doing it. When I was younger, my parents would also have my siblings and I help one another, even though we were in different grades, which ended up being beneficial to all of us. "
opiniagirl wrote on Oct 23, 2008 11:47 AM:
There is a growing number of teachers, parents, and students that advocate the abolishment, or at least a limit to the amount, of homework. The main reason is the belief that students also learn from activities in life other than textbooks and workbooks found in classrooms. A whole day in class and most of the night reading school books that are related to the subject in school leaves a student out of touch, without free time, and unable to get exercise or pursue extracurricular activities. Talents and interest of the student often cannot be nurtured in a classroom setting with teachers focused only on a specific subject.
Moreover, there is a considerable body of research supporting the idea that homework is of little educational value, and that for young children (i.e. under 14) it actually has a negative effect on learning.
Research it...homework is busy work! "
pharper wrote on Oct 23, 2008 3:30 PM:
a teacher wrote on Oct 26, 2008 11:22 AM:
However, as a parent I have often wondered how much of the homework that my own kids bring home is busy work. I was especially appalled at the amount of homework my daughters brought home when they were in third and fourth grade. When my sons were in middle school, I was similarly appalled that homework was worth half of their grade.
The research also says that most teachers receive very little training in home to create effective home work and that curriculum and texts are of little help in this department. My experience is that many parents get upset if their child is NOT getting home work or the assignments are "too creative". "
steph wrote on Oct 26, 2008 3:17 PM:
I truly feel that my children benefitted from elementary grade homework, so that by the time they reached middle and high school, they understood the risks of procrastination, and learned to focus even with distractions. They learned that completion of homework is expected not just by the teacher but by the parents. There were tears (from me, of course) and some long nights and hard lessons learned (get started early, because one is tired at 11pm when finishing assignments) but now my children do their homework with little residual nagging from me or their father.
In our house, homework is done at the kitchen table, ALL over the table. It's a mess, but it's important work, and we make it the focus of each evening. My youngest has Tourette's (mild) and difficulty concentrating at times, but he is blessed to be pretty smart. Homework takes all afternoon sometimes--it's done in snippets. Luckily, too, his older siblings are excellent role models, and he really wants to be taken seriously, so he gets it done. The feedback of getting good grades when he does the work is good reinforcement; likewise, zero marks for not turning in work he claimed he didn't have--not such a good feeling. Also the threat of having a cell phone taken away if the grades aren't what we expect--that's a good motivator, as well. The kids have a goal of going to a university, so they understand they'll have to do the work that other university-bound kids are doing if they're going to secure a spot. "
diehard4ever wrote on Oct 26, 2008 4:49 PM:
a teacher wrote on Oct 26, 2008 7:12 PM:
Home Work at early elementary grades (1-3) is not productive and can be counter productive.
HW should be about 10 minutes per grade.
HW is essential in secondary school, but needs to be well thought out, not just busy work.
By and large, teachers are not trained to design good HW assignments.
I find it very difficult to be creative with HW. Basically, students and parents want something easy. "
a teacher wrote on Oct 26, 2008 7:34 PM:
I have mixed feelings about it, I don't like that style of teaching. However, CPM has research that shows it is an effective method of teaching math (it also has it's critics with dueling research).
Maybe this will help (this is what i tell my bright students when they get frustrated). The goal of CPM is not to teach you the rules, but to understand the math behind the rules. You are being taught to be a Mathematician.
I'm sure you know that -3 + (-4) = -7, but can you tell me why? Those pluses and minuses are a way to understand why (there are no positives to cancel out the negatives, so they accumulate). Being able to understand the reasons things work helps you figure more things out. "
diehard4ever wrote on Oct 27, 2008 7:12 AM:
You're right, it was the pace that annoyed me the most, but along with that my teacher had us use that method on homework and problems WAY later in the book, or we didn't get credit. So for homework instead of doing 10 integer problems in two minutes, it took me ten to write everything out. I'm not sure if it was just the teacher who taught me or the book. Thankfully my math teacher this year sympathizes with me since she doesn't like the "long way" around either, she gives us an option if we do good to do it anyway we want.
I do understand why the answer is, but it's hard to put in words. "
opiniagirl wrote on Oct 27, 2008 8:17 AM:
In universities and college you do not spend the entire day in classes. 12-18 units is considered full time – about 12 to 20 hours per week of Class time. Plenty of time left for the homework without exhausting every hour of every day. Public school kids already spend at least 7 hours per day in school. I agree that homework is important in middle and high school to reinforce what was taught in class. But like a teacher says, it must be relevant and productive.
My oldest is taking NVC classes for high school credit and she is whizzing through them with minimal effort. High School is not an accurate representation of what to expect from college anymore. If kids went to NVC and took all their credits there for high school they would be done with high school in 5-6 semesters. Colleges even limit your credits so you can’t be overworked, because it affects grade point average as a whole. "
opiniagirl wrote on Oct 27, 2008 8:18 AM:
opiniagirl wrote on Oct 27, 2008 8:22 AM:
Angelina - work hard, play hard, fight hard, love hard! You're gonna go far honey! "
funnyme wrote on Oct 27, 2008 1:23 PM:
Thank You! Angelina is a great kid with a fabulous mind and a big heart (mama bear speaking of course :)
Now, let me ask you how did your friends do this? Do I have to be homeschooling in order for her to take the "core classes" at JC (NVC in this case) and others at the High School?
Please advise me how to go about this. "
opiniagirl wrote on Oct 27, 2008 9:15 PM:
opiniagirl wrote on Oct 27, 2008 9:16 PM:
You can enroll into the high school for as many classes as you choose as long as you stipulate how you intend to get the remaining credits that she will not be completing at the public school.
Also if your child is struggling, which may not be the case for you, this works in reverse. Kids can drop the extra's (art, choir, drama, etc.) at public school and take them at the college during the summer or some evenings. My daughter is also completing her foreign language at the college (Sign Language).
Remember that this decreases funding for the public school so they will "advise" against it, but the choice is ultimately yours. "
a teacher wrote on Oct 28, 2008 12:13 PM:
opiniagirl- I actually agree with much of what you have to say about education in general. If you look into the origins of modern schools you'll see they were designed to be education factories, and continue that today. It worked adequetely for a bygone era, but is now completely obselete.
Home schooling is, under the right conditions, far superior. The problem is that it is hugely expensive. Take whatever you could earn in a job and subtract it from your household income. I would homeschool my girls, but they also have to eat and I am a single parent, so it's not possible.
I believe that there are models for effective schools, but the problem is that it requires a big change in how we think about education, children and familly in general. It would also, probably be very expensive. "
opiniagirl wrote on Oct 28, 2008 5:03 PM:
Sad reality! "
pharper wrote on Oct 28, 2008 7:48 PM:
You can call the school and ask for a tour of it during school hours to see how it runs--I believe they're free. I also give tours, so you could ask for me. :) "
pharper wrote on Oct 28, 2008 7:49 PM:
a teacher wrote on Oct 29, 2008 6:09 AM:
funnyme wrote on Oct 29, 2008 11:40 AM:
Thank you very much for this great information, we will definitely look into doing something like that. Being able to get college credits it certainly makes graduating from college a lot faster (less expensive too, I assume) and less boring.
pharper,
Thanks for the offer.
I have to admit, we are a bit skeptical about New Tech. It appears to be the "natural" high school program to go to after being a middle schooler at River unfortunately River and Angelina were not a match. Good teachers though.
What middle school did you go to?
teacher,
Thanks for the input. "
pharper wrote on Oct 29, 2008 2:52 PM:
opiniagirl wrote on Oct 30, 2008 3:27 PM:
funnyme wrote on Oct 31, 2008 9:41 AM: