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Do our kids have too much homework?

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?

By Marian Wilde, GreatSchools Staff
 

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.org "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."

"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

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, 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 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 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.

 
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Comments from GreatSchools.org readers

01/5/2010:
"I am a 9th grader this year and I can not believe how much homework I have everynight. I am up ever night until 1:30am or later and I have to wake up for school the next morning at 6. I always have math homework! Everyday! I am also apart of the school musical and practice goes till 5:30, then dinner then I am up until 1:30 doing nothing but homework! I am sooo tired in the morning and during school, some days I am just so tired I stay home from school. Some of the homework I get I don't understand so I bring it to my parents and they don't understand it either! So there I am every night trying my hardest to try to get this (intagrated science) homework done all by my self. I don't think teacher get that are own parents don't understand it, if we can't go are parents for help, then what are we suppose to do? I know a lot of the time in my class leave answers blanke because they didn't understand it! This is crazy! Do know what my teachers do to fix this? They gives us even m! ore homework! They think by giving us more homework that we will understand it better! Thats just a lie! If we don't understand it in the first place how do they expect us to do more? My teachers also give us chapters to review (there like 4-10 pages with vocab and terms) Then the next day we learn even more vocab. Teachers don't give us time to memroize stuff, its always 'Learn faster'. well some of us have to take the time and read over it a bunch of times. A lot of kids also have lives, friends,sports,ohhh and also being teenagers! I use to love going to school but ever since I hit highschool, I hate everything about school. I use to be this smiley sweet little girl, now Im not this tired, stressed out teenager. I have fallen asleep in class only once because i was so tired and the lesson was borning ( We were learning about the Early Church and all the popes. snoree.. we shouldn't be graded on our faith!) Thats what I have to say, and I loved finally saying it and hopei! ng Im not the only one that has kept all this anger inside. Be! cause believe me, us higherschoolers, We are very pissed off with school and homework. Oh one last thing. When teachers give us a ton of homework and then we hand it back to them and we don't get it back for like 3 weeks I can't help but smile, because they know what we went through and now they have to grade it and also I get mad a want to say 'We spent hours doing that homework for you, why can't you get it back to us the next day?.. What was that? ohh you had other papers to grade and you just didn't have time to do it?!? ohhh you poor poor thing! Now you know how we feel, isn't so fun after all huh? But some how we manage to get back to you the next day! Gosh us highschoolers are pretty darn amazing! Remember were jugeling sports,family,life! Yup were just amazing!' God, if i could say to my teachers just once I would be the happiest person alive! Ok ok, i am done!(Now im off to finish my homework and study for exams! Go highschool!!!) ugh."
12/21/2009:
"It's that time of year again--for the Pre-Holiday, Homework Cram. Teachers justify it by saying that having tests now will give us less work to do over break. That, however, is not the case. There is then the Holiday Break Homework Cram. Teachers explain that doing inordinate amounts of work over the holidays is so we don't have to be behind when we come back. Finally, there is the Post-Holiday Break Homework Cram: the time when teachers realize that there two previous tactics didn't work, thus, they will have to load on the assignments. I find it ridiculious that at the most hectic time of year, school is making student's lives even more filled. Student's top priorities at this point are to shop, bake, decorate, and celebrate. Homework is an uneccessary diversion, something that students won't devote as much time to as they would at other times of the year even though teachers believe the holidays are a time for getting ahead/catching up. Teachers have the choice of i! f they'd rather go to their family's Christmas party or if they'd prefer to grade an essay. They can plan their time as they please, as well as the lives of dozens of students. If they have any empathy, they wouldn't force students to become recluses the week before the holiday break, the week of, and the week after. "
12/21/2009:
"Teachers claim they give us homework to prepare for assessment. It can help us get better grades on tests if given for that reason. But how is assigning a worksheet on phenotypes a week after our genetics unit going to help us now? Is this not a complete waste of time, especially the weekend before Christmas when we have preparations to make, not to mention a new unit to study for?"
12/10/2009:
"Homework didn't teach us to talk coherently, our social lives did. Oh, except... y'know... slang, hah."
12/7/2009:
"My main objection with high school assignments is that they do not teach me anything about the topic, conceptually. Instead, they focus on arbitrary minutiae. I took an AP class, believing I would get a better understanding of the topic in preparation for college and my career. Instead, I believe that my counterparts in academic courses learned more about American history. I can't tell you much about Continential Congress, but I can tell you which president was second from the left in Thomas Rossitor's Portrait of the gathering (James Madison). I doubt that anyone on Capitol Hill would even know this, and they obviously weren't hindered by this gap in knowledge. I can tell you how many chickens were on page 284, but will that help me understand why pioneers settled the West? I did not get a degree in Education, but unlike 2/3 of my teachers, I can tell you the difference between memorization and understanding. "
12/7/2009:
"Teachers wouldn't have to give so much homework if they used in class time more effectively. As a high school student, I find the majority of my teacher's lectures to be an inefficient use of time that would have much better been spent taking notes from my book or studying. When you are speaking at students like they're a brick wall for 90 minutes straight, obviously their attention will wane, and they will thus have to relearn the material on their own because their teacher's explanation was insufficient to begin with. Many of my teachers have a very tangent-based, circumlocutious style. I leave class knowing more about irrelevant details (Bill Clinton's economic policy in an 18TH CENTURY American history class or Tiger Wood's adultery) than I know about the targeted topic itself. I find myself counting down the minutes to when I can get home and actually learn something. Too many teachers use the excuse that students are old enough to self-teach for their poor use of in-! class time. They claim that they don't have time for in-class projects, debates, or videos, yet these are the things that engage students the most, and which they will learn the most from. It's no secret that kids were more interested in learning back in elementary school. It was because the methods were more hands-on, and class time was used to teach, not to outline the 50 pages students will have to read for homework. "
12/7/2009:
"I get four hours of homework per day"
12/3/2009:
"I receive SO much homework each night. I often have to stay up past 1:00 AM doing homework. And I have to wake up at 6:00 PM for school. OK, some might tell me to NOT get A's, to NOT take advanced (AP/honors) classes, and to NOT participate in extracurricular activities... But that's pretty much just discouraging learning. I take advanced classes because I want to learn more and have a bright future... Teachers must think that being sleep-deprived, stressed out, and sacrificing social/family life is an essential part of being successful. Ah, I would be doing MUCH better on standardized testing and my extracurriculars if I didn't do the nonsense busywork teachers assign. But then, if I didn't do homework, my GPA would be must lower so I'm really left with no choice. Sure, some types of homework are productive (e.g. practicing [a reasonable # of] math problems to reinforce concepts, writing [a reasonable # of] essays, reading [a reasonable load], etc). But homework that are presented in INSANE amounts (e.g. reading 50 pages of Charles Dickens a night), homework that are just busywork (e.g. crossword puzzles), and homework whose purpose is to teach you what the teacher didn't have time or was incapable of teaching (e.g. learning by reading the textbook)... Those types of homework should be banned."
12/3/2009:
"The funny thing is that the most coherent answers are from the people with the most homework. Not that the people with more homework are happier. 2-3 hours and occasionally 1 or 4 in grade 8 for me."
12/3/2009:
"I think a lot of parents have no idea what us older kids are doing when it comes with homework. Except of course those horribly evil report cards and its online counterpart. I shudder to think about it. Really, I understand that real life will take hard work and determination (the only thing that's keeping those two little numbers (maybe) above a 70), but who on Earth are you 'insert-people-most-directly-responsible-for-homework-overload' to decide that none of us have passions that we don't need to be forced into. I mean seriously? My parents /laughed/ at me when I said I was stressed."
12/1/2009:
"i think that parents are being lied to about how much homework they really have"
11/30/2009:
" My junior and senior year of high school I spent 8+ hours on homework each night. I had to give up everything I enjoyed:sports, working to save up some money for myself in college, reading on my own, friends, etc. I am now forcing myself to get back into things I once loved but am having a hard time doing it. I cannot read anymore on my own. I have completely lost interest. I used to study science ( I am working to become a physicist) on my own and I wanted to write a book. Now I don't care. I am now a senior in college and due to the stress of it all (obviously the homework has gotten worse in college) I have developed symptoms of bipolar disorder. When I am on breaks from school I am fine, but as soon as school starts again I have a ton of mental health problems. I am starting medications this week so hopefully I don't have to drop out of college because of my problems caused by TOO MUCH HOMEWORK!!!"
11/30/2009:
"REALLY GOOD ADVISE AND IT HAS HELPED ME ALOT"
11/30/2009:
"'I am in 10th Grade, playing football on a varsity team,(Which takes a lot of work), and taking all Honors classes. When I get home from football practice at 6pm I I feel like going to sleep! There are nights where I'm up til midnight doing homework, and waking up at 4am to finish. By the end of my last class I have practically fallen asleep,but...ah yes a three hour football practice...fun. If you could hear my coach yelling at me for lack of concentration. All in all, I am getting A's in every class, but it has taken more work then I care to elaborate on. I'm sure there are many of you who have something such as a dance class or sports, that feel the homework burden on top of you. It is very likely that you would excel in both fields if this burdened was lightened. "
11/24/2009:
"i believe that less homework is better. because if you are doing a projact like the science fair or anything else"
11/24/2009:
"I agree that some schools have an unreasonable amount of homework for K-2 grade. My son is in Kindergarten. I am a single mom who could not afford to put my son in headstart or a pre-K type child care facility. When he started school we were completely overwhelmed with the amount of homework they must do in order to go on to 1st grade. We don't make it home until 6:45pm M-F. From 7-8 we are doing homework and from 8-9 we eat dinner and take a bath then hit the sack. There are some nights (tai-kwon-do M,W,F) where I can't force him to do any homework at all. Should he not do any other activities? Just school? When I was in kindergarten I drew pictures for homework. I wrote my letters repeatedly for homework. My son's homework has him writing sentences that he doesn't know. If I am spelling it for him...what is he learning? "
11/24/2009:
"That is why so many teenagers are suicidal. Many of us just can't take it anymore! WE have so as much as 8 classes.. do you know how much homework that is?! "
11/20/2009:
"Ok, look im in 8th grade all honors classes with alg 1 i get homework EVERYNIGHT! im so tired i can barely pay attention anymore in classes i mean seriously, our teachers pile it on so that we do more homework then classwork! i have a thanksgiving break soon and five of my teachers got together and wrote out a plan so that every day of my weeklong vacation will be working me EVEN THANKSGIVING DAY! they have it planned to the day, sat-sun-mon-tue-wed-thur-fri-sat-sun seriously all of them! on top of that i still have to do science projects and a history report! i spend so much time at home on homework i finish around 11 pm and i start at 4pm... i tell them this but they just assume its their class only that gives homework and im tired of it. i wish they had to do what we have to for once and see how happy they are to go bucketing it on us! im emailing this to all of my teachers and my principle and hope ONE of them gets the point. ~ wish me luck, eric."
11/19/2009:
"Im an Eighth grader and im falling behind,because of too much homework i'm failing and have a lot of missing asignments and its just too hard, myparents cant help me and the teachers don't understand my IEP they think all i need is extra time and a little help no i have to take up all my time to get it done for school it's just not right."
11/19/2009:
"Great, balanced article -- just linked it at http://www.squidoo.com/too-much-homework A homework opt-out policy could be a solution that would meet everyone's needs. Whether you agree or not, I'd love to hear from you--teachers, parents, students. Join the conversation: http://www.squidoo.com/homework-opt-out-policy"
11/19/2009:
"im in SIXTH GRADE and 11 years old, my teacher gives me homework all homework due thursday on monday we get a small assignment (not very hard) tuesday about 1-1:30 hours, now wednesday (keep in mind that this is due onn thursday), we get about 3-3:30 hours all to be done that night. COME ON! im 11! p.s. if we dont get it done she will YELL at us. i thought the point of being young was to complain about homework when you barely have any then go outside and HAVE A LIFE!"
11/17/2009:
"sweat i love this website "
11/12/2009:
"Too much homework. I stayed up to 12:30 trying to finish my homework that is due tomorrow. I need less"
11/6/2009:
"i think that we have been getting to much homework and deserve a break. "
11/6/2009:
"Im in calc, ap chem, and french right now. I can honestly each night i spend 3-5 hours on homework."
11/3/2009:
"Is there anything us students can do about this, or should we just cope and try not to kill ourselves or drop out? Really. I wish every teacher had to go through a month of all honors and AP (not including what they teach) You know that show 'Are you smarter than a fifth grader' ? It just shows how little the trivia we learned in school is important to these successful adults in the 'real world'. "
11/2/2009:
"There is WAY to much homework. I am stressing out and sometimes even crying from all my homework, I don't have time to relax or even SLEEP my full amount."
11/2/2009:
"10:00 lol I'm in 9th grade with geometry honors , English honors, physics and biology honors, marine oceanographic science,Spanish 1, Advance Placement (AP) human geography,orientation. and usually I don't finish homework till like 1 or 2 am sometimes even 3:30 am and I have to wake up at 4:30 am for my bus, and get home at 4:30 pm. For example one day I had to ... Do 100 geometry math problems then define 45 vocab for marine sci do a slideshow project on the chapter he didn't even teach and take a test on it and also study the 45 vocab because I had the test the next day then for physics and biology I had to do 5 pages of workbook question which sometimes make no sense. Then define 40 words for Ap human geography and also remember them , because I also have a test in that class, then do about 20 sentences using 5 of the pronouns given in spanish class. Then for English I would have to define and study 20 words for a test, then do a title page for a project, a complete slide show,a contents page, then 5 pages of writing (about anything) and 2 pages out of a workbook, then for marin sci I also have to do part of my sci fair and for Ap human do part of my history fair like finding 5 primary resources on my topics and study for a chapter test which he doesn't even teach he just makes of read 60 pages out of the history book and remember it all , because he doesn't give study guides or tell us whats on the test. oh yeh all of that was due the next day and I tried to tell my ap human geography how much homework we had all he did was laugh , because i was asking for one day to finish his homework but he didn't care and i did about 50% oof the homework , but he just gave me a 0% which brought me grade down from a 90 to a 77% you may also say well you took hard course , but the thing is I have be in these classes the school won't let me take any other courses even if I wanted too , which I do sometimes I think these teachers are trying to kill me I don't even know how im getting a's and b's literally too much homework I hope in 10th grade they give us less and that it's just my crazy teachers because they don't talk with the other teachers so they don't know how much homework in total of the students are really getting they think that all we have is their homework "
11/2/2009:
"I definately have too much home work and some teachers having confusing or rediculous requirements! I get my homework done and get good grades, but I can admit I'm stressed and need a little down time. Down time for me is the weekends. I wish every Friday that I can get all my weekend homework done in class. Kids have a social life and no one can help that, without a social life, we could be depressed or we wouldn't know how to interact in a social environment. I DO study and ask my friends for homework help when I'm at my friends' houses, we always get any homework we have done. Yes, i agree some kids spend too much ttime talking in class or focusing on their social life. But not all and actually most focus on school. Stating parents' opinion isn't really resourceful because they don't go to class with us or do our homework. I do ask my mom quite a bit for help but she doesn't do it for me. She motivates me and helps me. I spend easily 2 hours on homework, sometimes more. A! lso, teachers aren't clear on due dates, which means we could be sprung with doing a whole essay on one night on top of other homework. I enjoy school and like the majority of my teachers. I am a responsible teenager and I have my priorities in line."
11/2/2009:
"i myself definately have too much homework. I do admit i am extremely more stressed than a 14 year old should be and i have constant stress headaches. My bus come at 6:35 am and i get up at 5:45 am. I have an hour long bus ride and then the school day. I get on the bus to go home at 3 and get home at 4. I had a longer comment but it didn't work so if you would like to talk with me about this please comment my comment and i will talk with you. I am very adamant on my side in this issue and i hope some peole do contact me."
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