Homework
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Homework, or a homework assignment, is a set of tasks assigned to students by their teachers to be completed outside the class. Common homework assignments may include a quantity or period of reading to be performed, writing or typing to be completed, problems to be solved, a school project to be built (such as a diorama or display), or other skills to be practiced.
Main objectives and reasons
The basic objectives of assigning homework to students are the same as schooling in general: to increase the knowledge and improve the abilities and skills of the students.[1] However, opponents of homework cite homework as rote, or grind work, designed to take up children's time, without offering tangible benefit.[2] Homework may be designed to reinforce what students have already learned,[3] prepare them for upcoming (or complex or difficult) lessons, extend what they know by having them apply it to new situations, or to integrate their abilities by applying many different skills to a single task. Homework also provides an opportunity for parents to participate in their children's education.
Effect
Academic performance
Methods to assess the correlation between homework and academic performance vary.[4] Homework research dates back to the early-1900s. However, no consensus exists on the general effectiveness on homework.[5] Results of homework studies varied based on multiple factors, such as the age group of those studied and the measure of academic performance.[4]
Cooper, Robinson & Patall (2006) studied the literature on homework from 1987 to 2003, yielding varied results from different studies. The studies compared the time spent on homework with grades and test scores as measures of academic achievement. Studies involving older students reported a positive and significant correlation, but studies involving younger students reported a slightly negative correlation when both parent and student reports of the time spent on homework were included, but the correlation slightly increased when only student reports were included.[a] The authors recommended that researchers commence further studies using different methodology, warning that the correlation may not be caused by age.[8] For older students, very high amounts of homework caused students' academic performance to worsen.
To measure the time spent on homework, the studies analyzed in Cooper, Robinson & Patall (2006) used the reports of either the students or the parents. When students provided the report, the correlation was positive and significant, but when parents provided the report, the correlation became significantly weaker.[b]
Methodologies used to study the effectiveness of homework have been disputed. To measure student achievement, most studies used either grades, test scores, or both. Trautwein & Köller (2003) argued that grades may be an unsound measure of achievement, as individual grades may depend on the overall performance of the class: a student may receive a higher grade for the same work in one class than another. In Cooper, Robinson & Patall (2006), the correlation between time spent on homework and measures of academic achievement became slightly weaker using standardized test scores rather than grades.[c]
Non-academic
Cooper, Robinson & Patall (2006) analyzed five studies on the correlation between time spent on homework and attitudes towards homework and various other aspects of school, and two studies on school conduct. The analysis of attitudes differed between assumptions, and were positive, but ranged from insignificant and significant from a correlation of zero.[d]
For conduct, the analysis pointed towards Epstein (1988) and Vazsonyi & Pickering (2003). Epstein (1988) studied parent reports of the conduct of elementary school students and found a near-zero correlation of r = .01. Vazsonyi & Pickering (2003) studied 809 adolescents in American high schools, and found that, using the Normative Deviance Scale as a model for deviance, the correlation was r = .28 for Caucasian students, and r = .24 for African-American students. For all three of the correlations, higher values represent a higher correlation between time spent on homework and poor conduct.[10]
Bempechat (2004) suggested that homework develops students' motivation and study skills. Xu & Yuan (2003) notes that parents and teachers generally deem homework as a builder of students' study skills and personal responsibility skills. Students are more likely to have negative perceptions about homework, being less likely to ascribe the development of such skills to homework.[11] Leone & Richards (1989) found that students generally had negative emotions when completing homework and reduced engagement compared to other activities.
Health and daily life
Homework has been identified in numerous studies and articles as a dominant or significant source of stress and anxiety for students.[12] Studies on the relation between homework and health are few compared to studies on academic performance.[13][14]
Cheung & Leung-Ngai (1992) surveyed 1,983 students in Hong Kong, and found that homework led not only to added stress and anxiety, but also physical symptoms, such as headaches and stomachaches. Students in the survey who were ridiculed or punished by parents and peers had a higher incidence of depression symptoms, with 2.2% of students reporting suicidal thoughts, and anxiety was exacerbated by punishments and criticism of students by teachers for both problems with homework as well as forgetting to hand in homework.
A 2007 study of American students by MetLife found that 89% of students felt stressed from homework, with 34% reporting that they "often" or "very often" felt stressed from homework. Stress was especially evident among high school students. Students that reported stress from homework were more likely to be deprived of sleep.[15]
Homework can cause tension and conflict in the home as well as at school, and can reduce students' family and leisure time. In the Cheung & Leung-Ngai (1992) survey, failure to complete homework and low grades where homework was a contributing factor was correlated with greater conflict; some students have reported teachers and parents frequently criticizing their work. In the MetLife study, high school students reported spending more time completing homework than performing home tasks.[16] Kohn (2006) argued that homework can create family conflict and reduce students' quality of life. The authors of Sallee & Rigler (2008), both high school English teachers, reported that their homework disrupted their students' extracurricular activities and responsibilities. However, Kiewra et al. (2009) found that parents were less likely to report homework as a distraction from their children's activities and responsibilities. Galloway, Conner & Pope (2013) recommended further empirical study relating to this aspect due to the difference between student and parent observations.
Galloway, Conner & Pope (2013) surveyed 4,317 high school students from ten high-performing schools, and found that students reported spending more than three hours on homework daily. 72% of the students reported stress from homework, and 82% reported physical symptoms. The students slept an average of 6 hours 48 minutes, lower than the recommendations prescribed by various health agencies.
History
The earliest known teacher to administer homework was Roberto Nevilis in Venice in 1095, but there might have been instructors that have administered homework before him despite the lack of evidence. [17]
United States
Historically, homework was frowned upon in American culture. With few students interested in higher education, and due to the necessity to complete daily chores, homework was discouraged not only by parents, but also by school districts. In 1901, the California legislature passed an act that effectively abolished homework for those who attended kindergarten through the eighth grade. But, in the 1950s, with increasing pressure on the United States to stay ahead in the Cold War, homework made a resurgence, and children were encouraged to keep up with their Russian counterparts. By the end of the Cold War in the early 1990s, the consensus in American education was overwhelmingly in favor of issuing homework to students of all grade levels.[18]
In a study done at the University of Michigan in 2007, research concluded that the amount of homework given is increasing over time. In a sample taken of students between the ages of 6 and 9, it was shown that students spend more than two hours a week on homework, as opposed to 44 minutes in 1981.[19] Homework scholar Harris Cooper concluded after a comprehensive review that homework does not improve academic achievements for grade school students. Cooper analyzed dozens of students and found that kids who are assigned homework in middle and high school actually score "somewhat" better on standardized tests, but that kids who do 60 to 90 minutes of homework in middle school and more than 2 hours in high school actually score worse.[20]
Notes and references
Notes
- ^ The analysis differentiated between "fixed" and "random" error assumptions. Fixed error assumptions state that sampling error occurs only because of differences between participants in the study, but random error assumptions state that sampling error is due to other influences. The analysis found, under fixed error assumptions, that the correlation between time spent on homework for kindergarten to grade 6 students was r = −.04 (CI: −.06 – −.02), where CI is the 95% confidence interval. When the scope of studies was only limited to student reports, the correlation for the same group increased to r = .06 (CI: .00 – .11). For students in grade 7 to grade 12, which only included student reports the correlation was r = .25 (CI: .25 – .25).[6] For student reports under random error assumptions, the correlations for student reports only became, for kindergarten to grade 6 and grade 7 to grade 12 respectively, r = .22 (CI: .00 – .42) and r = .19 (CI: .17 – .22)[7]
- ^ The analysis found that the correlation between time spent on homework by students' reports were r = .25 (CI: .25 – .25) and r = .19 (CI: .16 – .21) by fixed and random error assumptions respectively, where CI is the 95% confidence interval. When parents reported, the correlations became r = −.03 (CI: −.05 – −.01) and r = −.02 (CI: −.10 – .07).[9]
- ^ Specifically, the correlation was r = .27 (CI: .26 – .27) using grades, but r = .24 (CI: .24 – .25), where CI means the 95% confidence interval.[6]
- ^ Specifically, the correlation was r = .12 unweighted, but r = .13 (CI: .11 – .14) weighted using fixed error assumptions, where CI is the 95% confidence interval. Using random error assumptions r = .13 (CI: −.01 – .26). The authors noted that the fixed error correlation was significant, but the random error correlation was insignificant.[10]
Citations
- ^ Synthesis of research on homework. H Cooper - Educational leadership, 1989 - addison.pausd.org
- ^ Haddock, Vicki (2006-10-09). "After years of teachers piling it on, there's a new movement to ... Abolish homework". The San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2007-12-09.
Vigorous scrutiny of the research, they argue, fails to demonstrate tangible benefits of homework, particularly for elementary students. What it does instead, they contend, is rob children of childhood, play havoc with family life and asphyxiate their natural curiosity. Learning becomes a mind-numbing grind rather than an engaging adventure.
- ^ Needlmen, Robert. "Homework: The Rules of the Game".
- ^ a b Cooper, Robinson & Patall (2006), p. 1.
- ^ Trautwein & Köller (2003).
- ^ a b Cooper, Robinson & Patall (2006), p. 42.
- ^ Cooper, Robinson & Patall (2006), p. 45.
- ^ Cooper, Robinson & Patall (2006), pp. 50–51.
- ^ Cooper, Robinson & Patall (2006), p. 44.
- ^ a b Cooper, Robinson & Patall (2006), p. 47.
- ^ Xu & Yuan (2003).
- ^ Bauwens & Hourcade (1992), Conner & Denise (2009) , Hardy (2003), Kouzma & Kennedy (2002), West & Wood (1970), Ystgaard (1997).
- ^ Cheung & Leung-Ngai (1992), p. 146.
- ^ Galloway & Conner (2013), p. 493.
- ^ Markow, Amie & Margot (2007), p. 137.
- ^ Markow, Amie & Margot (2007).
- ^ "Strange Facts: Who Invented Homework?". Flokka.
- ^ "History of Homework". The San Francisco Chronicle. 1999-12-20. Retrieved 2007-03-24.
- ^ Seligman, Katherine (1999-12-19). "Parents: Too much homework". Hearst Communications Inc. Retrieved 2013-06-03.
- ^ Wallis, Claudia (August 29, 2006). "The Myth About Homework". Time Online.
Works
Effectiveness of homework
- Cooper, Harris; Robinson, Jorgianne C.; Patall, Erika A. (2006). "Does Homework Improve Academic Achievement? A Synthesis of Research, 1987-2003". Review of Educational Research. 71 (6): 1–62.
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(help) - Epstein, Joyce L. (1988), "Homework practices, achievements, and behaviors of elementary school students", Center for Research on Elementary and Middle Schools
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(help) - Trautwein, Ulrich; Köller, Olaf (2003). "The Relationship Between Homework and Achievement—Still Much of a Mystery". Educational Psychology Review. 15 (2): 115–145. doi:10.1023/A:1023460414243.
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(help) - Vazsonyi, Alexander T.; Pickering, Lloyd E. (2003). "The Importance of Family and School Domains in Adolescent Deviance: African American and Caucasian Youth". Journal of Youth and Adolescence. 32 (2): 115–128. doi:10.1023/A:1021857801554.
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Homework and non-academic effects
- Bauwens, Jeanne; Hourcade, Jack J. (1992). "School-Based Sources of Stress Among Elementary and Secondary At-Risk Students". The School Counselor. 40 (2): 97–102.
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(help) - Bempechat, Janine (2004). "The Motivational Benefits of Homework: A Social-Cognitive Perspective". Theory In Practice. 43 (3): 189–196.
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(help) - Cheung, S. K.; Leung-Ngai, J. M. Y. (1992). "Impact of homework stress on children's physical and psychological well-being" (PDF). Journal of the Hong Kong Medical Association. 44 (3): 146–150.
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(help) - Conner, Jerusha; Pope, Denise; Galloway, Mollie (2009). "Success with Less Stress". Health and Learning. 67 (4): 54–58.
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(help) - Cooper, Robinsin & Patall (2006, pp. 46–48)
- Galloway, Mollie; Conner, Jerusha; Pope, Denise (2013). "Nonacademic Effects of Homework in Privileged, High-Performing High Schools". The Journal of Experimental Education. 81 (4): 490–510. doi:10.1080/00220973.2012.745469.
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(help) - Hardy, Lawrence (2003). "Overburdened, Overwhelmed". American School Board Journal. 190: 18–23.
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(help) - Kiewra, Kenneth A; Kaufman, Douglas F.; Hart, Katie; Scoular, Jacqui; Brown, Marissa; Keller, Gwendolyn; Tyler, Becci (2009). "What Parents, Researchers, and the Popular Press Have to Say About Homework". scholarlypartnershipsedu. 4 (1): 93–109.
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(help) - Kouzma, Nadya M.; Kennedy, Gerard A. (2002). "Homework, stress, and mood disturbance in senior high school students" (PDF). Psychological Reports. 91 (1): 193–198. doi:10.2466/pr0.2002.91.1.193. PMID 12353781.
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(help) - Leone, Carla M.; Richards, H. (1989). "Classwork and homework in early adolescence: The ecology of achievement". Journal of Youth and Adolescence. 18 (6): 531–548. doi:10.1007/BF02139072. PMID 24272124.
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(help) - Markow, Dana; Kim, Amie; Liebman, Margot (2007), The MetLife Survey of the American Teacher: The homework experience (PDF), Metropolitan Life Insurance Foundation
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(help) - Sallee, Buffy; Rigler, Neil (2008). "Doing Our Homework on Homework: How Does Homework Help?". The English Journal. 98 (2): 46–51.
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(help) - West, Charles K.; Wood, Edward S. (1970). "Academic Pressures on Public School Students". Educational Leadership. 3 (4): 585–589.
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(help) - Xu, Jianzhong; Yuan, Ruiping (2003). "Doing homework: Listening to students', parents', and teachers' voices in one urban middle school community". School Community Journal. 13 (2): 25–44.
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(help) - Ystgaard, M. (1997). "Life stress, social support and psychological distress in late adolescence". Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology. 32 (5): 277–283. doi:10.1007/BF00789040. PMID 9257518.
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Other
- Cooper, Harris (2007). The Battle Over Homework: Common Ground for Administrators, Teachers, and Parents (3rd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press. ISBN 9781412937139.
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(help) - Kohn, Alfie (2006). The Homework Myth. Cambridge, MA: Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-7382-1085-4.
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(help) Chapter 2 is free to read.
Further reading
- Duke Study: Homework Helps Students Succeed in School, As Long as There Isn't Too Much
- The Case Against Homework: How Homework Is Hurting Our Children and What We Can Do About It by Sarah Bennett & Nancy Kalish (2006) Discusses in detail assessments of studies on homework and the authors' own research and assessment of the homework situation in the United States. Has specific recommendations and sample letters to be used in negotiating a reduced homework load for your child.
- Closing the Book on Homework: Enhancing Public Education and Freeing Family Time by John Buell (2004)
- The Battle Over Homework: Common Ground for Administrators, Teachers, and Parents by Harris Cooper (2007)
- The Homework Myth: Why Our Kids Get Too Much of a Bad Thing by Alfie Kohn (2006)
- The End of Homework: How Homework Disrupts families, Overburdens Children, and Limits Learning by Etta Kralovec and John Buell (2000)
External links
- "The Myth About Homework", Claudia Wallis, Time Magazine, Aug. 29, 2006
- "Forget Homework", Emily Bazelon, Slate, Sept. 14, 2006
- History of "The Dog Ate My Homework" as an excuse
- Bridging the Great Homework Divide: A Solutions Guide for Parents of Middle School Students - from the National Education Association.
- Homework tips for parents - U.S. Department of Education.
- BBC's (U.K.) parents' school guide
- Helping Your Students With Homework: A Guide For Teachers - U.S. Department of Education.
- Homework Practices that Support Students with Disabilities