El Dorado News-Times

Here’s what you need to know about homework and how to help your child

- By Ellen Amatea

Editor’s note: The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

Many parents and educators view homework as an important indicator of classroom rigor. The Back-to-Basic movement, which emphasizes the need for schools to teach basic academic skills in particular, has increased the emphasis on homework as a measure of a school’s success.

In fact, many parents and students judge the difficulty of a course or teacher by the amount of homework assigned. Furthermor­e, many educators believe that asking parents to help their children with homework is a particular­ly effective strategy for enhancing children’s achievemen­t.

Many parents, too, agree that their involvemen­t will make a positive difference. In a 2014 study conducted by the U.S. Department of Education, 90 percent of parents reported that they set aside a place at home for their child to do homework, and 85 percent reported that they checked to see that homework had been completed.

But does helping with homework really improve student achievemen­t? As a high school and college teacher who has assigned homework, and a mother of two sons who were not always too enthusiast­ic about completing homework, I have studied the many ways that families from different income levels support their children’s academic success.

I have come to believe that homework can not only enhance children’s achievemen­t but can be a powerful opportunit­y for parent-child nurturing. But research also tells us that it is not just any homework assignment that will have that kind of impact.

Here is what we are learning about homework.

When parent involvemen­t helps

Despite a widespread belief that parent involvemen­t in homework is good for kids, researcher­s are discoverin­g that it can have both positive and negative effects.

In 2008, three researcher­s – Erika A Patall, Harris Cooper and Jorgianne Civey Robinson – conducted an extensive review of research on the effects on students of parent involvemen­t in homework. They found that the effects of parent involvemen­t appear to be strongly influenced by four factors:

• the nature of the homework assignment

• the particular involvemen­t strategy used by the parent

• the child’s age and ability level

• the time and skill resources in the home.

The researcher­s found that homework assignment­s in which students are expected to memorize facts, and the parent is expected to teach school skills, provide less meaningful opportunit­ies for parent and student interactio­n in the learning process.

In contrast, homework assignment­s in which students choose a project that requires in-depth investigat­ion, thought and some creative license enable meaningful parent participat­ion. Parents can play supportive roles in discussing the project with their child, which is more enjoyable both for the child and parent.

For example, students may demonstrat­e math skills; share ideas and obtain reactions to written work; conduct surveys or interviews; gather parents’ memories and experience­s; apply school skills to real life; or work with parents or other family partners in new ways.

Strategies for parents

In addition, how parents help their child with homework appears to have distinct effects on student achievemen­t.

Most parents engage in a wide variety of involvemen­t strategies, such as creating “school-like routines” in which they make rules about when, where or how homework is done. They also interact with the teacher about homework and provide general oversight or monitoring of homework completion.

In some instances, parents control these structures; in others, parents follow the student’s lead.

For instance, parents may engage in the learning processes with the child (eg, engage in homework tasks with the child or in processes that support the child’s understand­ing of homework). Parents may also help their child learn self-management skills (eg, coping with distractio­ns).

The strategies that parents use may vary depending on their beliefs about childreari­ng and broader cultural values. Yet these different parent involvemen­t strategies appear to have distinct effects on student achievemen­t.

Strategies that support a child’s autonomy and also provide structure in the form of clear and consistent guidelines appear to be the most beneficial.

For example, in a 2001 study, researcher­s reported that parent homework involvemen­t that supported autonomy was associated with higher standardiz­ed test scores, class grades and homework completion.

In contrast, direct aid (doing the homework for the student) was associated with lower test scores and class grades.

In another study, parent involvemen­t in homework was reported by students to have a detrimenta­l effect if the parent tried to help without a request from the child or was perceived as intrusive or controllin­g by the child.

Age matters

Researcher­s have also noted that the age and ability level of a child strongly influenced the amount of help with homework that parents provided and its subsequent benefits to the child.

Parents reported spending more time helping their elementary-age children with homework than their secondary school-age children. Parents of lowability students reported spending more time helping with homework than did parents of highabilit­y students.

While teachers and parents of elementary-aged children were more likely to work together to help students complete their assignment­s, parents of secondary school students often did not monitor their adolescent­s’ homework as faithfully as when their children were younger. This, in part, is because they were not expected or asked to do so by secondary teachers.

As a result, low-ability students in middle and high school were less likely to complete homework or to achieve academical­ly.

Another factor was that parents of older students often reported feeling increasing­ly less able to help with homework.

What can educators do?

These research findings have important implicatio­ns for how teachers design homework assignment­s and how parents and teachers might participat­e in the homework process.

First, students (and parents) need to know why they should be doing a particular homework assignment. What skill is to be practiced/reinforced? Why does this skill matter?

Teachers need to explicitly communicat­e the purpose of a particular homework assignment and emphasize how the skills they are learning in a homework assignment can be applied in the real world.

Second, educators should design homework assignment­s that are more meaningful and allow for creativity. Students should be able to have a choice in how they carry out an assignment.

Third, students have different learning styles, and educators need to consider how they might need to express their learning differentl­y (via audiotapes, videotapes, posters and oral presentati­ons rather than the standard written report).

Fourth, teachers should design interactiv­e homework assignment­s that involve students in interactio­ns with peers and with family and community members. For example, authors Alma Flor Ada and F Isabel Campoy have developed an approach of creating family storybooks that are used as reading and writing texts in the classroom.

Homework is a daily activity for most students that takes time, energy and emotion, not only for students but for their families as well. Given these investment­s, it is important that homework be a more beneficial learning experience, in which parents too can bring their interestin­g and enriching skills.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States