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How Much Homework Is Too Much?
Has your child shed tears over the amount of homework he has? Has he stayed up until 10 p.m. working on assignments? Have you sacrificed your weekends for homework?
Many students and their parents are frazzled by the amount of homework being piled on in the schools. Yet researchers say that American students have just the right amount of homework.
"Kids today are overwhelmed!" a parent recently wrote in an email to GreatSchools.net "My first-grade son was required to research a significant person from history and write a paper of at least two pages about the person, with a bibliography. How can he be expected to do that by himself? He just started to learn to read and write a couple of months ago. Schools are pushing too hard and expecting too much from kids."
Diane Garfield, a fifth-grade teacher in San Francisco, concurs. "I believe that we're stressing children out," she says.
But hold on, it's not just the kids who are stressed out. "Teachers nowadays assign these almost college-level projects with requirements that make my mouth fall open with disbelief," says another frustrated parent. "It's not just the kids who suffer!"
"How many people take home an average of two hours or more of work that must be completed for the next day?" asks Tonya Noonan Herring, a New Mexico mother of three,
The last 20 years or so have been the period when there has been the strongest consensus that homework is a good thing and that more is better. Very recently, in the last five years or so, there has been some evidence that that consensus is starting to crack.
— Brian Gill, Rand Corporation
an attorney and a former high school English teacher. "Most of us, even attorneys, do not do this. Bottom line: students have too much homework and most of it is not productive or necessary."
Homework Studies How do educational researchers weigh in on the issue? According to Brian Gill, a senior social scientist at the Rand Corporation, there is no evidence that kids are doing more homework than they did before.
"If you look at high school kids in the late '90s, they're not doing substantially more homework than kids did in the '80s, '70s, '60s or the '40s," he says. "In fact, the trends through most of this time period are pretty flat. And most high school students in this country don't do a lot of homework. The median appears to be about four hours a week."
Education researchers like Gill base their conclusions, in part, on data gathered by the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) tests.
"It doesn't suggest that most kids are doing a tremendous amount," says Gill. "That's not to say there aren't any kids with too much homework. There surely are some. There's enormous variation across communities. But it's not a crisis in that it's a very small proportion of kids who are spending an enormous amount of time on homework."
Etta Kralovec, author of The End of Homework: How Homework Disrupts Families, Overburdens Children, and Limits Learning, disagrees, saying NAEP data is not a reliable source of information. "Students take the NAEP test and one of the questions they have to fill out is, 'How much homework did you do last night' Anybody who knows schools knows
Before the 1980s it didn't really occur to anybody to assign homework to kids who were young enough that they weren't yet reading.
— Brian Gill, Rand Corporation
that teachers by and large do not give homework the night before a national assessment. It just doesn't happen. Teachers are very clear with kids that they need to get a good night's sleep and they need to eat well to prepare for a test.
"So asking a kid how much homework they did the night before a national test and claiming that that data tells us anything about the general run of the mill experience of kids and homework over the school year is, I think, really dishonest."
Further muddying the waters is a AP/AOL poll that suggests that most Americans feel that their children are getting the right amount of homework. It found that 57% of parents felt that their child was assigned about the right amount of homework, 23% thought there was too little and 19% thought there was too much.
One Indisputable Fact One homework fact that educators do agree upon is that the young child today is doing more homework than ever before.
"Parents are correct in saying that they didn't get homework in the early grades and that their kids do," says Harris Cooper, professor of psychology and director of the education program at Duke University.
Gill quantifies the change this way: "There has been some increase in homework for the kids in kindergarten, first grade and second grade. But it's been an increase from zero to 20 minutes a day. So that is something that's fairly new in the last quarter century."
The History of Homework In his research, Gill found that homework has always been controversial. "Around the turn of the 20th century, the Ladies' Home Journal carried on a crusade against homework. They thought that kids were better off spending their time outside playing and looking at clouds. The most spectacular success this movement had was in the state of California, where in 1901 the legislature passed a law abolishing homework in grades K-8. That lasted about 15 years and then was quietly repealed. Then there was a lot of activism against homework again in the 1930s."
The proponents of homework have remained consistent in their reasons for why homework is a beneficial practice, says Gill. "One, it extends the work in the classroom with additional time on task. Second, it develops habits of independent study. Third, it's a form of communication between the school and the parents. It gives parents an idea of what their kids are doing in school."
The anti-homework crowd has also been consistent in their reasons for wanting to abolish or reduce homework.
"The first one is children's health," says Gill. "A hundred years ago, you had medical doctors testifying that heavy loads of books were causing children's spines to be bent."
The more things change, the more they stay the same, it seems. There were also concerns about excessive amounts of stress.
"Although they didn't use the term 'stress,'" says Gill. "They worried about 'nervous breakdowns.'"
"In the 1930s, there were lots of graduate students in education schools around the country who were doing experiments that claimed to show that homework had no academic value — that kids who got homework didn't learn any more than kids who didn't," Gill continues. Also, a lot of
If you want your child to do something, have them read. Just read, read, read! If you want to call that homework fine, but I say reading is their ticket.
—Diane Garfield, fifth-grade teacher
the opposition to homework, in the first half of the 20th century, was motivated by a notion that it was a leftover from a 19th-century model of schooling, which was based on recitation, memorization and drill. Progressive educators were trying to replace that with something more creative, something more interesting to kids."
The More-Is-Better Movement Garfield, the San Francisco fifth-grade teacher, says that when she started teaching 30 years ago, she didn't give any homework. "Then parents started asking for it," she says. "I got In junior high and high school there's so much homework, they need to get prepared." So I bought that one. I said, 'OK, they need to be prepared.' But they don't need two hours."
Cooper sees the trend toward more homework as symptomatic of high-achieving parents who want the best for their children. "Part of it, I think, is pressure from the parents with regard to their desire to have their kids be competitive for the best universities in the country. The communities in which homework is being piled on are generally affluent communities."
Homework Guidelines What's a parent to do, you ask? Fortunately, there are some sanity-saving homework guidelines.
Cooper points to "The 10-Minute Rule" formulated by the National PTA and the National Education Association, which suggests that kids should be doing about 10 minutes of homework per night per grade level. In other words, 10 minutes for first-graders, 20 for second-graders and so on.
The Optimal Amount Cooper has found that the correlation between homework and achievement is generally supportive of these guidelines. "We found that for kids in elementary school there was hardly any relationship between how much homework young children did and how well they were doing in school, but in middle school the relationship is positive and increases until the kids were doing between an hour to two hours a night, which is right where the 10-minute rule says it's going to be optimal.
"After that it didn't go up anymore. Kids that reported doing more than two hours of homework a night in middle school weren't doing any better in school than kids who were doing between an hour to two hours."
Garfield has a very clear homework policy that she distributes to her parents at the beginning of each school year. "I give one subject a night. It's what we were studying in class or preparation for the next day. It should be done within half an hour at most. I believe that children have many outside activities now and they also need to live fully as children. To have them work for six hours a day at school and then go home and work for hours at night does not seem right. It doesn't allow them to have a childhood."
International Comparisons How do American kids fare when compared to students in other countries? Professors Gerald LeTendre and David Baker of Pennsylvania State University conclude in their 2005 book, National Differences, Global Similarities: World Culture and the Future of Schooling, that American middle-schoolers do more homework than their peers in Japan, Korea or Taiwan, but less than their peers in Singapore and Hong Kong.
One of the surprising findings of their research was that more homework does not correlate with higher test scores. LeTendre notes: "That really flummoxes people because they say, 'Doesn't doing more homework mean getting better scores?' The answer quite simply is no."
Homework Is a Complicated Thing
To be effective, homework must be used in a certain way, he says. "Let me give you an example. Most homework in the fourth grade in the U.S. is worksheets. Fill them out, turn them in, maybe the teacher will check them, maybe not. That is a very ineffective use of homework. An effective use of homework would be the teacher sitting down and thinking 'Elizabeth has trouble with number placement, so I'm going to give her seven problems on number placement.' Then the next day the teacher sits down with Elizabeth and she says, 'Was this hard for you? Where did you have difficulty?' Then she gives Elizabeth either more or less material. As you can imagine, that kind of homework rarely happens."
Shotgun Homework "What typically happens is people give what we call 'shotgun homework': blanket drills, questions and problems from the book. On a national level that's associated with less well-functioning school systems," he says. "In a sense, you could sort of think of it as a sign of weaker teachers or less well-prepared teachers. Over time, we see that in elementary and middle schools more and more homework is being given, and that countries around the world are doing this in an attempt to increase their test scores, and that is basically a failing strategy."
Additional Resources Books The End of Homework: How Homework Disrupts Families, Overburdens Children, and Limits Learning by Etta Kralovec and John Buell, Beacon Press, 2001.
The Battle Over Homework: Common Ground for Administrators, Teachers, and Parents by Harris M. Cooper, Corwin Press, 2001.
Seven Steps to Homework Success: A Family Guide to Solving Common Homework Problems by Sydney Zentall and Sam Goldstein, Specialty Press, 1998.
Updated December 2007

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Comments From GreatSchools.net Users
11/21/2008:
"Hi there! I am 13 years old and i am staying up until 12 to do my basic homework .... not including projects. my parents continue to think that it is me that is the only one having trouble with this and that i am the only one that has a problam with the amount of homework which is completely incorrect. I am worried about 'burning out' before i even get into college or university. If a grade 8 is anxious about burning out now think of in grade 12! my weekends are spent doing homework and i feel that my childhood is slipping out of my hands by the minute. And what am i doing to spend my last few years as a kid? HOMEWORK!"
11/12/2008:
"That is just ridiculous. School today is a JOKE. half the time Kids don't do their homework,and they mess around in class and the teachers can't control them. The teachers don't really care because all they want to do is coach athletics. Other kids who want to learn suffer because the kids who don't want to be therer are distracting, unmotivated, and rude. Kids need to get over it. Having a lot of homework teaches you skills you need for the rest of your life: time management, prioritizing and working under a time limit. Schools sugar coat everything and it is just a joke. School has been dumbed so far down. What happens when you go to college and you are expected to do 10 hours of homework a night regaurdless. Shouldn't kids want to be prepared for that?? How about when you get a job and then tell your boss he's giving you too much work to do? well he's not gonna sugar coat it then your gonna get fired because he's paying you to work not to complain."
11/12/2008:
"Saying that high schoolers get 4 hours of homework A WEEK is completely wrong, because if you actually see every high school student, you will notice that they get 4 hours or more of homework A DAY, and by the time they finish it, there is no time for anything else, and guess what? Not enough sleep. All of those studies that talk about kids today not getting enough sleep and telling parents how to make their kids get enough sleep, they don't help if they don't realize WHAT is causing not enough sleep... I do not agree with those who claim that it's because of all the technology available today, or whatever other reason someone might have, none of those things are true. Kids today are just growing up too fast and it is sad. I feel like I did not get to enjoy my childhood and I am going to college next year. I feel like I am too young and not ready. This isn't right. WE DON'T HAVE A LIFE ANYMORE. I get depressed very often, and school makes me even more depressed that I can't ! even do other things that I enjoy. I love learning, but I don't think it should interfere with living a normal life. Just give us more classwork, or at least less homework. Honestly, I learned most of what I know from reading books, the computer, and fun lessons at school, not from homework, and I think many other kids would agree with me on this. Especially now with this block schedule we have... 90 minutes or more for each class is just way too much, and we lose our attention. If teachers made it more fun and taught more during that time, maybe we'd have less homework. School is eight hours long and by the time I get home, I feel dead. There really is no time for anything else. Anyway, it is too late and our lives have already been ruined. I do hope it will be better for my children, though. And then they ask why so many people these days suffer from depression or any other serious illness... WAKE UP AND STOP BLAMING DOCTORS WHO DIAGNOSE PEOPLE. Sorry, but this is the tru! th, and people must hear it whether they agree or not."
11/12/2008:
"I'm a 13 year old studying in London and I think that you suggesting staying up to 10 means a lot of homework is completely wrong. I start my homwork at 5 but still seem to be up to midnight every night! I was once up till 1:30 in the morning! Bearing in mind I have to wake up at 6:30 every day, this is ridiculous! I'm only 13! Imagine what this will be like in a few years the way things are happening!"
11/5/2008:
"it's even worst for me! i have to life outside school. i just started A levels (advanced levels/ 6th form) and i'm dying. reading the article above and seeing that ''on average 4 hours a weekk'' i started laughing. i get on average 10 hours of homework a day for 5 days plus school hours (which i have come to discover that school is becoming really usless to me) i work ALL saturday, have extra physics class on sinday and have to do homeworl all sunday night. sleep? i get about 4 hours. i have to time to eat except sometimes at luch hour during school. i have to wake up early in the morning to do homework before school and deprive myself of sleep. honestly i believe my teachers are not very good as they skim through the chaoters and tell us to read it when we go home...sure. when they are ''teaching'' an entire chapter each class. i started school a little under two months ago and right now i'm trying to teach myself 9 chapters of biology (250 pages from the textbook) mechanics in physics and two other subjects i have no choice but to ignore. i'm sleepy, i'm tired, my head hurts and i feel weak. i don't care anymore about class as i do most of the teaching (not true homework i'm too busy trying to teach myself then find time to do mountains of homework) to myslef which is why i say school is really useless right now. i'm really considering schooling myself because homework right now is being a rather large burden that i don't need. i want to explore outside the syllabus again and start back drawing and learning japanese. and making my own projects and hiking. i want to go play video games and have time to sit down and eat. I WANT TO SLEEP! i want to talk with frinds and just be able to lay down and stare into space! homework makes me hate school! and i can't wait til it's over. my childhood i can tell will prematurely end because i have no time! i want to watch cartoons on saturday morning in my pajamas not struggle to finish an essay on some pointless thing that i will never use in my life because it has no place! teachers and authourities really need to understand. we can't take it anymore! i've already had a mental vreakdow! every week children are passing out from stress! i scored straight a's in high schol exams and i did it withou homework! teachers need to understand. we doen't want to learn whats set out for us. we want to reasearch and do things that shape us into better people! but homework acts as chains to our limbs. it's painful and the amount of work is becoming hazardous to our health. and (in a more immature statement) IT'S NOT FAIR! teachers kill us through the school year with work while they get to go homw and get more than 6 hours sleep. they have time to enjoy life. most kids trying to work to good grades know what they know about life through their bedroms on the computer. i wish those teachers would live our lives for a week. i know they'd break under the pressure. those who wonder why am i wasting my time writing this and not doen my oh so plentifull homework let me tell you. i don't care anymore. i'd teach myself and go at my own pace. and i'll learn more than they could ever teach and get a high exam grade! watch me! i give up on the sc hool system. it's a tragc fail and i have made the decsion that should i be stupid enpugh to marry and reproduce. i'm sending them to primary school and junior high. high school. but after that they wil teach themselves their subjects of choise at the advanced level. because the school system today is just rediculous!"
11/5/2008:
" I am a middle school student and i have around 2-3 hours of homework a night. Also I have an after school sport to go to, wrestling. So i come home very tired and then have to do hours of homework I am expected to have done the next day?!? I personally think that my teachers give to much homework, how are middle school students supposed to have an after school activity and still have a life with homework."
11/5/2008:
"I'm a sophomore in high school, and I am feeling the effects of too much work. Granted, I am taking 4 honors classes (including the highest level band), one dual credit college class, and 1 AP class, but I get way too much homework! I get home from school at 3pm and literally spend the entire night doing work for the next day (I frequently work non-stop from 3pm to 11pm- I even work during dinner). I struggle to find time to eat, brush my teeth, and shower; how on Earth am I supposed to sleep? On average, I only get 4 hours a night because I get up at 5 to finish homework that I was too exhausted to do the night before, I do homework just before class, and at lunch. I am old enough to have my driver's license, but I have not even been able to find time to test for my permit thanks to homework! It's ridiculous! My grades are ALL falling because I am just too exhausted to focus during class, and I sometimes fall asleep during tests! This absolutely distresses me, as I have alw! ays been at the top of my class; now, I find that those who cheat are getting better grades, but I refuse to go against my own morals. I don't know how much more I can take before I snap...I've already had a few nervous breakdowns from stress and lack of sleep! And to think I'm expected to get a job later this year! At least I only have 2 years of high school, 4 years of college, and medical school left! Hopefully I'll get enough sleep to live to be an adult!"
10/31/2008:
"Im a junior in high school. The worst part is not the four hours that I have to devote to homework but the fact that I have a job. After school, I go to work. I get home around 8:30. Still, I try to get as much done as possible, which isnt very much sometimes. I feel miserable about this."
10/24/2008:
"There's a huge difference between middle school and high school homework. Middle School: Half a marking period spent on writing a paper. In class time for research+bibliography writing for several weeks, for just a four page paper. High School: One week to write an eight page paper, no in class time. The difference is a ridculous. "
10/24/2008:
"I have a 14 & 15 year old Son & Daughter. I just read all the articles above and have to say that you can go back to the 50's, 60's, 70's, 80's and 90's as much as you like, but nothing can change the fact that our children now live in a world that is full of all kinds of stresses, violence, sex, crime etc...the computer has become the center of their world, and they rely on them for almost everything, including making 'Friends.' So can we look at the big picture, and look at the here and now, because life is just going to get harder for our youngsters, so as adults, particularly those in positions of authority, should concentrate on the emotional and physical wellbeing of our children whilst in school, and remember they are only young ONCE!!"
10/24/2008:
"Homework Gets to the point where I'm brushing my teeth, trying to get to bed because I'm exhausted, and my mom's shouting at me: Finish Your Cover Page! Homework or hygiene? "
10/21/2008:
"We have the same issue here is Sweden. Always do this, do that, homework, tests, national exams etc... I'm a senior at highschool spending roughly 8-9 hours at school and homework until I pass out. So sometimes I get 3-4 hours of sleep per day for a whole week! Of course I had this coming since I chose all those classes and do my best at it. On the other hand I could do like the rest of my friends that barely pass each course and fail. Ah, chin up, ONLY this year and 3 years of college left..."
10/21/2008:
"Better is quality, not quantity."
10/13/2008:
"I’m a senior in high school. And I still complain about getting to much home work. And it’s not because of senioritis. Teachers now feel like they cram about 5 new lessons a day in a class and expect you to understand and get it done the next day. And by the time the next day comes, they add more. I am taking a lot of classes, so I shouldn’t complain. But it just seems like every teacher expects that you get it done, they don’t realize that you do have other homework from other classes, or big tests you need to study for ( Which for me can sometimes be up to 3 tests from classes on the same day STRESS!) and they also don’t realize that there is family time, and activities people have. I can honestly say, that I don’t have activities I am in, so I should get my homework done, but wrong. I still spend up to two maybe three hours at a time to do home work, and usually its three to four days a week. I would love to just be able to not worry about having to get thing! s done for the next day or worry about a text the next day. I really think they should take things down a notch. I realize that now compared to back in the day, kids are slacking but I believe that the only reason is because they are pushing to much and we just don’t care anymore."
10/13/2008:
"I'm a sophomore in high school...I'm in six honors classes, one of which is an AP college preparatory course. On average, I have 4-5 hours of homework PER NIGHT. I feel like it is EXTREMELY excessive, and as an honors student, I should be trusted to learn more in school, and to require less practice (busy-work in my opinion) outside of school. In addition, I swim competitively, with practices for two hours six days a week, I'm on speech team, math team, I'm in the Direct Action community service club, I volunteer weekly at the local hospital, I am a peer juror, I am in the highest level musical band ensemble at my high school, I'm in the marching band and drum-line,and I am actively involved in the youth group at my church. I live in an affluent suburb of Chicago, but I go to a public high school. I feel over-scheduled, but compelled to be as such due to the pressures of college admissions and the recent economical woes which could burden me with additional student loans. I receive NO pressure from my parents to do these things (in fact, the exact opposite). I get on average 4-5 hours of sleep per night. I'm afraid that I'm going to burn out before I'm eighteen..."
10/13/2008:
" Thank you so much, your web site has been very helpful. I myself have about 3-3.5 hours of homework a night, and It just kills me. I have anywhere between 40-70 problems of Algebra, 1-15 of Spanish, 10-25 problems of history, 15-30 problems of science, and about two worksheets of English that All of the teachers expect to get done for the next day. I don't even get an hour to myself. I finish my homework by 12:00 or 12:45 in the morning, and then I get up at 6:35 to get ready for school. I can't even get 8 hours of sleep. I think that there is a serious lack in communication between the teachers, and that they need to get their act together to make schools a more positive place to be. I find it hard to participate in extracurricular activities, but if you don't participate actively in the school community, you are seen as a slacker. I would once again like to thank you for your website, and I found it vary helpful. I just wish I could tell my teachers about this issue without offending them. I also think that teachers have become lazier. In class, we just switch the papers with an assigned partner, and we correct each others papers. All the teachers have to do is give you the assignment, and put ! the grades in the computer. How would they feel with this amount of stress? I think that most of them would crack, even I have cracked, and I have to say I don't know how much longer I can deal with this."
10/13/2008:
"So heres the thing... All this homework needs to stop. Im a junior in high school and yeah we should be getting homework because it truelly does just help us be certain we know what is being taught but honestly haveing 3-4 hours doesn't help. After the first hour we go brain dead anyways and zone out. We all just go through the motions and might not even know what we are doing. I used to get straight A's but now I procrastinate to the max simply because I dread having to sit down for a long period of time to do stuff that, honestly, I dont care about. Im doing it right now! Im supposed to be writing an essay about this but it is such a pointless assignment that I have no interest in starting it. And because of it Ill get a bad grade and it will lower my grade dramatically but Im at the point where I don't care anymore. How is that teaching me?? My AP Euro History teacher last term realized that, by giving us hours of homework, he was taking away our chance to act our age. He told us that he expected us to go to every football game, every dance, every school function possible and he wanted us to be awake and ready to learn the next day. How can we do that if we are stuck at home trying to do homework? We miss out on having a life and are up til the butt-crack of dawn doing homework so the next day in class, half the students are asleep. How is that teaching us? We should be experiencing life.. not reading about it in a text book."
10/13/2008:
"I am a high school student and completely overwhelmed with homework. I understand that some homework is essential but when you are getting up to 4 or 5 hours of homework a night along with work, and six hours of school where do you fit sleep in? On average a good night of sleep is 5 hours. I haven't been eating a lot lately because there is simply NO TIME! When you wake up at 4:30 go to early bird activities, go to school, go to work, get home at either seven or ten when are you supposed to do that homework? With the excessive amounts of homework kids are just cheating. Cheating is the easiest for kids to do now that they are overwhelmed with homework. My math teacher said' Well you go home and do nothing so why not have homework to keep you busy?' Point out a time where we as students get to relax and i will gladly do your homework but I guarantee you wont find a gap. This extra stress is unnecessary for 17 year olds to handle. "
10/6/2008:
"My Sons are at the high school , my youngest has only been there 5 weeks and i am shocked at the ammount of homework my son is being given, he is getting one piece of homework every day so at the moment he is very stressed. My sons am not the happy children they use to be and it's all because of the presure the teachers are putting them under. SOMETHING SHOULD BE DONE!"
09/25/2008:
"to those kids who wrote in: if you think 2 or 3 hours of homwork is bad think again!!!! i get home from school at 3. its 9 at night and im still doing homework. it stresses me out and i cant take it anymore!!! for once i would like a break from it all!!!! the only time when i dont get homework is x-mas vacation and summer vacation."
09/25/2008:
"I would absolutly love it if my daughter had 10 min./ grade level! I have a 4th grader with 2-5 hours of homework, Monday- Friday. This is very unneccisary, and is doing more harm than good. She is very tired by the time she is finishing up, and has no 'downtime'. I honestly do not think the teacher is doing that much work every night, and even if she were, she is an adult, not a 9 year old. I am very supportive of children learning as much as they can, however, I do not beleive this is the proper way to go about getting this accomplished. Anyways, thanks for the article, it was informative, and helpful."
09/4/2008:
"I have been saying this for years now!! I just saw a mother on the nbc news who went to the principle with this issue and san ramon school district is changing their homework policy including in the high school by january. I have 5 children only one has already graduated, and I will say, I feel like im in school, in 2 different elementary classes and 8 classes in middle school. They all need my help with there homework. I wont survive when my 3 year old starts school. this is way to much. With the amount of time these children spend in school and then add on the hours of homework. It's outragous!"
09/4/2008:
"I think teachers are not covering everything in class that is why children have too much homework to do. My daugther is in 2 grade and I spend 2 hours doing homework everyday. In addition, teachers assign class project that are to difficult for a child to do even with parents participation."
08/22/2008:
"There is a quote in here that says high schoolers have an average of 4 hrs. a week, I have an average of 3 hours a night during the week,and an average of 4 a day during the weekend. I have two AP classes and i'm on Varsity Cross country, also I have 3 clubs I'm in and I'm on the newspaper team. There is no way that that statistic work with the average student. Especially at my school. We all have schedules like that."
08/19/2008:
"Well homework isn't that bad i guess. In math it does reinforce what you learned and such(same goes for the other subjects) but come on, doing 3+ homework is NOT cool! after a hard day of going through unruly pears who don't really care about school and start picking fights, id like to lay down for a moment and relax. No im not afraid to do homework (95% of the time) for me it's no that hard since i get most of my lessons in one day but the thing is... THEY are L-O-N-G and B-O-R-I-N-G!! solving quadratics, Pythagorean theorem, imaginary numbers ughh. Sure i get it but dang doing 30 problems gets pretty boring and thus i end up falling asleep or i get tempted by a voice that keeps saying: 'take a break for awhile just pop in SSBB and after 10 min you'll be fine' but after doing so it's hard for me to start that redundancy again. Sure it's okay to push but of you are pushing a student who just can't keep up since things are going on or they just don't care, they will just drop! the books and say: 'I don't give a @!*# about this %$@! im just gonna leave' that's like trapping a dog in a corner, and what happens when you do that? you'll get bitten. Overall, homework isn't that bad but they should try to maximize on the student's abilities and nothing to much. I don't mind getting 4 homework assignments every day just as long as they are not the long repetitive kind. 10 questions of math, read a section on your history book and do vocab and do highlights, do only one lab for bio or chemistry, and some worksheets. Just three of these are nice. "
08/14/2008:
"I am a first grade teacher and a parent of a 2nd and 4th grader. I agree that homework can stress kids out. I pick the kids up from childcare at 5:30p.m. They just want to relax when they get home. They also need to eat dinner and have a bath. Adding homework to the mix can bring on tears. My first grader who scores well on the report card would resist and refuse to do it. She tried to do her best all day in school, and she wanted to relax when she got home. I felt like I struggled to get her to do her homework all year. My older daughter got her homework done by herself, but she still complained that she hated doing it. As a teacher I always get the message from parents that they want homework so I assign a weekly packet. I get a least one or two complaints a year that it is not enough. The class cheered when I announced I wasn't going to send it anymore at the end of the year. I think homework is a problem and I fear when my children reach junior high level that they will have too much. I would like to see a movement towards less homework for kids, but I'm not sure how we would make this happen."
07/3/2008:
"I am a teacher and mother of a kindergartener. I'm stressed from work all the time because I'm told that my 2nd graders are not performing high enough on tests (88%). Therefore, I need to keep pushing them . I work from 7 am to 6 pm everyday and take work home. The schools expect up to cram too many assignments in a day. Realistically, it would take the entire day to teach just reading/language. Just look at the teachers' manuals. It's crazy! I don't blame my son's Kinder. teacher for giving homework because I know I need to do my part as a parent in this fast-pace society. Yes, I didn't get this much work as a child, but times have changed! Let's just work together! Teachers would not be in this field if we didn't care about students!!!!!!!!!!"
06/13/2008:
"I am a deaf Junior from California. Being deaf, fully mainstreamed in all classes with hearing people is very hard because I have to work twice harder than average student. And I feel so many of my teachers I have had so far are not so great at giving us reasonable homework. And I hate the way my school functions. Like really really H.A.T.E the school so much. I mean, 6 tests on the same day! Come on, it's so obvious a kid's not gonna pass all of them. I loathe their homework because they just eat up my life. I don't have time to keep contacts with all of my close friends from near or far. It's like being the moon, rotating around the sun, which is duh, homework. And I can't sleep at night peacefully because some works just repeats itself over and over in my freakin' mind. I had cried in classes. Cringed each time at the idea of being consumed up on homework. AND WORSE, I still don't know what to do with my life. It's all because of homeworks that took away my valuable time to seek life outside of school. I tried to keep with sports in school, but I quitted nearly all of them. I just can't handle it. 2 and half hours training, then 5 hours of works. I just can't do it. Not to mention that I live 1 and half hour from my high school. There's a high school 5 min. away from me, but I can't go because stupid school won't provide me sign language interpreter since this school, which i am attending, is the only school that provide deaf/HOH program for student like me who needs sign language interpreter in classes. And since I have a deafness, it makes it harder for me because I want to do all my best to show people that no such disability defines or makes a person deemed as the 'can't-do'ers.' And homework takes away my ability to enjoy myself and my life. Too much homework is also dangerous to student. Research said high-notch teenagers in high school had thoughts of suicide. I had thoughts of suicide. Speaking of my experience, homework caused my depression because I can't seem to enjoy life and the worst is that i can't enjoy myself. I missed so many fun parts of my life because of homeworks. Homework to me is like a prison, a barrier for me to have a social life. I have deaf and hearing friends. So, deafness to me is not something that pulls me down. Homeworks seriously needs some changes. I think the best thing to start the changes in giving out homework to students is get their $H*& ORGANIZED. Each day, I have unstable homework. English requires 2 hours, then Math an hour, then US History 2 hours, Chemistry 1 hour, and two elective an hour. And then the next, Math 2 hours due to two homeworks, US History 1 hour, then English 3 hours due to essay-writing and reading (essay must be excellent or otherwise you get C+ for at least five small mistakes. Another reason I hate English so much), Chemistry ARRGGHHH!!! And oh a good fact, I don't have time for my family. I used to love having my mom calls me down from my homework because she always have something to tell, nag, or show, whatever, and i loved it when my two sisters want me to play the 'monster' so they are princesses but now I hate it because each time I leave my homework, i obsessed over what time I have lost that I should have used for my homework or get frustrated that I have to stay up until 3 in the morning. And then get up 5 in the morning for bus transportation to get to my school. I seriously want to drop out of this school, but I seriously love my family too much for that. I am the oldest child and a first-genreation American-born. My family immigrated from China. I lost a father when I was 10. Mom and my other two little sisters needs me to hurry and get college education, then get a job to take care of my family. And sometimes I feel like the United States (politically, economically, BUT not socially) don't care about its families, but its fames as the world 's leading nation and business, all of which requires a college education. Things seriously need to change, be whatever it may come. A five-year high school with less course each year sounds good to me because I might get to enjoy more of my life and have time for my family."
06/2/2008:
"I am in fifth grade and i have tons of homework. When I was in my old school, homework was like a slip in thing. You know, I did it if I had time. Literally, I didn't check my work, and put a lot of effort into it. And that was ok. Now I come to a new school, and there's no telling how much you can have! I mean, we have research reports, and many projects in a row which all have a close due date. Sometimes, I can't write everything in my agenda, because it won't fit! Homework for me is using your time after-school to go over the day's activities, and get them nicely seated in your brain. But too much can lead to to much stress. And that's just not fair. Once, I sat up until 3:00 - 12:00 working on my research report. I don't know if it's just me, or we have too much homework. Sometimes, I agree, homework is needed. But too much is just useless for your brain, because you might get confused. I love homework, but i hate it. Get it?:)"
05/30/2008:
"i am a grade 11 student from canada. i spend most of my nights procrastinating. the amount of homework is overwelming! i say to myself, 'in a half hour, in another half hour...' i keep delaying it until its too late. seriously, who wants to sit down for 4 hours and work on things that they dont care about. even adults with jobs they enjoy dont do it!!(most of them) i took grade 12 philosophy last semester because i couldnt wait until next year... i did most if not all of the homework i was assigned. if i was given an hour and a half of homework, in Total, a night of things i dont like, i could handle it, but im given about 3-4 hours a night so i just think '%$@&!!!' i dont want to sit and do this! by not doing my homework i fall deeper and deeper into my little hole of stress and worry about my life. i feel worthless. if homework was a reasonable amount of time, kids like me would complete it and feel good about themselves!!! homework is a great feeling, but only if you do ! it! too much, and u feel horrible! my teacher will give me like an hour of homework from 1 class! and be like what?!?!?! u kids cant complete and hour of homework its not a big deal. I Have 3 Other Classes!!!! if all 4 teachers give me an hour of homework or more......it adds up!"
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