#38
Post
by mrkelley23 » Fri Nov 09, 2007 11:03 am
I should've answered this question earlier. My kids get varying amounts of homework. #1 finishes his before he even leaves school, usually. #2 has his share, but it usually only comes down to twice a week or so. #3 has much more, but it's usually because he got distracted at school and daydreamed the class away, and therefore didn't get the in-class work done.
As for the classes I teach, I think parents like Appa would say I don't give enough. In sympathy for my own busy-work-hating days, though, I put the burden back on the kids I teach, mostly. I tell them what they're expected to know, and when to know it by, and then quiz or test them over it. If they haven't kept up, they won't do well on the quizzes. I can get away with that in high school -- not so much in lower grades.
But I do think homework is overdone these days. Here's one reason, that's true in my state, at least. When I was in school, we had to take six classes a day. By our senior year, we could take a "free seventh" if we wanted, which cut it down to 5. The classes were longer, too, so we got more work done in class, leaving less time necessary for homework.
Now we have 7 classes a day in high school, 8 in middle school. There are no "free sevenths" and half as long for lunch. The classes are shorter, so many teachers feel like they have to assign lots of homework just to cover all the content.
Personally, I did more learning when I was left to my own devices, rather than being forced to do the equivalent of Harry Potter's "writing lines." Yes, drill and practice are necessary, but inwidely varying doses for different kids.
For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled. -- Richard Feynman