By Kathy Bushouse | South Florida Sun-Sentinel
February 19, 2009
FORT LAUDERDALE - The Broward County School Board is giving a new assignment to teachers for the upcoming school year: Take care when you're handing out homework.
The School Board on Wednesday unanimously approved homework guidelines that urge teachers to assign academically challenging work while also being considerate about not assigning too much homework.
While the policy doesn't stipulate time limits for homework, the district's guidelines suggest 10 minutes of work for each grade level. A first grader's assignment would take about 10 minutes to finish, while a high school junior's total homework load would take 110 minutes.
Board member Phyllis Hope said she sympathizes with overloaded students, and the parents who help them. She watched her 12-year-old grandson Tuesday night, and spent four hours helping him with a project.
The Broward County School Board is asking teachers to take care when they're handing out homework. The board on Wednesday unanimously approved homework guidelines that urge teachers to assign academically challenging work while also being considerate about not assigning too much homework.
The policy also requires teachers to provide "timely and appropriate feedback" on assignments, be sensitive about the costs of materials for projects, and collaborate with other teachers so projects are not assigned at the same time.
Though board members approved the policy Wednesday, it will take effect in the 2009-10 school year.
Jeanne Jusevic, chairwoman of the District Advisory Committee and parent of two Monarch High School students, said she thinks parents will find the new guidelines helpful.
Though many teachers try not to overwhelm students with too many assignments, "occasionally, parent complaints fall on deaf ears," Jusevic said. "Now we have a policy and procedures that we can point to."
Teachers should definitely have a limit
As a student, I say it depends on what classes you take! In high school we got to pick some of our classes, or at least the difficulty level. I took as many college-replacement classes (AP classes) as possible, hoping to earn some college credits before I got to college. I challenged myself and kept excellent grades and attendance, but I also worked on homework for about 4 hours a night, 5 days a week. Some of my friends though, who took less rigorous classes, could get all their homework done before even leaving school. I never had a study hall period, some of my friends had 2 a day. So, you can't always blame the teacher.
Right there. Oh yeah baby. Right there.
The US education system is getting worse, not better, and Asian countries (even so-called 'developing' ones) are kicking some serious American ass when it comes to science and technology curriculum.
So what's the solution?
Yes, worry about assigning too much homework and reigning in teachers, lest they push their students to excel. You can't have it both ways- the price of an exceptional academic culture is that sometimes students will either have to miss Gossip Girl or not make the highest mark.
Parents, upset that cocktail hour is interrupted because a teacher is pushing your kid? Wow, hate to be a buzz-kill here, but that's the least of your worries, you ought to suck it up and be thankful that as a result, your kid (hopefully) will have a fighting chance in a globally competitive economy.
Or, you can aim low, set 'homework guidelines' and then freak out when eastern Europe produces better IT and science research candidates than honors students in Florida.
Not particularly. There are some kids at my program that are assigned far more homework than I would have ever thought was reasonable. But it is up to the teacher, or professor. Mostly based on curriculum, not a sadistic pleasure to keep children out of the sunlight. Or based on how much the class has covered in class, or how much practice the class needs to help lock onto a subject and assimilate the information (yes, borg reference, for you Trekkies/Trekkers). It's all a matter of perspective. When I feel lazy or bogged down, it seems like a lot, but the professors rarely assign ridiculous assignments. For me they are a challenge, but they are doable. I know it's not like that everywhere, but from what I've seen, I do not think that children are assigned an excessive amount of homework.
However, I do wish to make a point that a great deal of textbooks that I've seen are out of date or haven't been maintained properly to be of use to the child. Not to mention hardcover books that are placed in a backpack that becomes entirely too heavy for the child carrying it....but that would probably be in another forum topic, no?
Being a parent there are numerous studies that show that doing homework doesn't provide any benefit. Imagine if we all went to work and were given a couple of hours worth of work to do at home after working all day.
The problem isn't one teacher giving you a shitload of homework, the problem is having 8classes and 5 of them are very difficult subjects where every teacher decides to give you homework on one unfortunate day. For example when I was still in school I had English, History, Biology, Chemistry and Calculus on the same day and it happened multiple times that I got homework from each of them on the exact same day.
Though I cant complain, here in New Zealand I cant remember one morning where I was up till 3 doing something where it happened regularly in South Africa.
Consistency in education is what should be strived for.. and it doesn't happen because of the amount of homework a particular student is given.. currently everyone is herded into the same class and taught at the same speed.. that speed is dictated by the teacher who may or may not be qualified for the job.. we need better paid and better educated teachers.. we need teachers who have some degree in psychology as a prerequisite to teaching.. we need schools to have defined hours of attendance and not flexible classes.. with the proper curriculum and processes in place a student could be well educated from 8am - 4pm each day with only two hours of homework per night.. not an unreasonable expectation...
It's a balance, to be sure...to teach effectively and in both quantity and quality, yet not to squeeze the life out of kids. I have to say, having lived in Asia and grown up in America, I can tell you that somehow these kids here grow up reasonably normal and happy without four hours of TV and Playstation time every night. Americans seem to really feel like long hours in school are a pain in their ass (but not nearly the pain that they'll feel when getting lapped by other countries for high-paying secure jobs).
Point taken on not settling for anything short of ideals...but the pragmatist and teacher in me knows that the education will have to be propped up without some sort of complete reimagination of economics and academics, nothing short of which would change the basic reality that American instructors and students know.
How in the hell do we get to a point where teachers command the six-figure salaries of physicians and attorneys? You want to pay 65% federal taxes to enable that to happen? What about the collapse of disposable income and small business when that occurs? Or the growth of an underground economy when the masses refuse (to various extents) to pay such a high levy? Scandinavians we are not, as Americans. Sorry that veers off into politics so quickly, but they are all intertwined...teachers can't make major-league money in a vacuum, where does it come from?
Speaking of China, I want to hear from Woman on this.