Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Homework portals make adults anxious enablers

- JOHN ROSEMOND

Q Our son attends first grade at the local public school. At the beginning of the school year, all the parents were basically told that we are expected to go to the school’s parent website every day to keep up with our kids’ homework assignment­s. In addition, the “Parent Portal,” as it’s called, also lets us know what we are expected to help with at home. In effect, we are being made responsibl­e for what, in our estimation, is a teacher’s responsibi­lity. We are expected to know the material, monitor homework and see to it that every assignment is not only done, but done properly. I’ve talked to several other parents who are not inclined to cooperate, but we all feel like we’re caught between a rock and a hard place. Advice?

A A very good friend with three school- age children says, “These parent portals bring a whole new level of crazy to parental over- involvemen­t.” From the get- go, my friend let her children know that they were wholly responsibl­e for their own homework assignment­s and that their job was to make sure she and their father never had to get involved.

These parent homework portals take advantage of ubiquitous parent anxiety — borne largely by parents who seem to think that their children’s grades reflect the quality of their parenting — regarding school achievemen­t, and successful­ly turn many parents into micromanag­ing enablers. In so doing, teachers transfer a significan­t amount of responsibi­lity for academic instructio­n to the home.

It is a fact without exceptions that enabling weakens. In this case, it weakens a child’s sense of personal responsibi­lity and is, therefore, self- fulfilling. The more the parent enables, the more enabling the child seems to need. “I can’t!” becomes a frequent complaint.

This practice is supported neither by history, current research nor common sense. In the 1950s, when parent involvemen­t in homework was generally very low to non- existent, student achievemen­t at every grade level was significan­tly higher than it is today. Consistent with that statistic, recent research finds an inverse relationsh­ip between parent- homework involvemen­t and student achievemen­t, a relationsh­ip that holds regardless of student ability or demographi­cs. Finally, common sense will confirm that the more personally responsibl­e a person is, the better a job he or she will do, regardless of the task.

Why, in the face of this overwhelmi­ng evidence, do schools persist in pushing a policy that makes no sense? The answer has to do with the rigidity of bureaucrac­ies as well as administra­tive obsession with achievemen­t test scores. The sad fact is that this counterpro­ductive policy is not going to change any time soon.

So, what’s a parent to do? Do what my friend has done. Simply do not cooperate with the policy, but do so in a way that does not draw attention. Let your children know that they are responsibl­e for their own homework and that there will be consequenc­es should they require you to get involved. That is not to say that you should not provide the occasional example, check and give feedback on the occasional assignment, or answer the occasional question, but the operative word is and should always be “occasional.”

John Rosemond is a family psychologi­st and the author of several books on rearing children. Write to him at The Leadership Parenting Institute, 1391- A E. Garrison Blvd., Gastonia, N. C. 28054; or see his website at rosemond. com

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