The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Help a teen out of a homework hole

There are steps toward helping kids get back on track.

- By Lisa Damour

Pandemic school is taking its toll on students, especially teens. A recent study, conducted by NBC News and Challenge Success, a nonprofit affiliated with the Stanford Graduate School of Education, found that 50% more kids in high school report feeling disengaged from school this year than last.

In December, Education Week reported that schools were seeing “dramatic increases in the number of failing or near-failing grades” on report cards.

A major symptom of school disengagem­ent is not turning in homework, a problem that can easily snowball. The further students fall behind, the more overwhelme­d they often become and the less likely they are to feel that they can catch up.

The good news is that finding out about missing homework is a first step to helping kids get back on track. You just need to keep a few considerat­ions in mind.

Empathy will get you further than anger

At this point in the pandemic, finding out that your child has let schoolwork slide may trigger an angry response. Everyone is worn down by the demands of pandemic life and many parents are already operating on their last nerve. Getting mad, however, is likely to cause kids to adopt a defensive or minimizing stance. Instead, try to be compassion­ate. What students who have fallen behind need most are problem-solving partners who want to understand what they are going through.

If you’re having trouble summoning your empathy, bear in mind that there are many good reasons a student could fall off pace this year. For instance, Ned Johnson, a profession­al tutor and coauthor of the book “The Self-driven Child,” noted that most teens have very little experience managing email, which is now a main source of informatio­n for those in remote or hybrid arrangemen­ts. “We know how overwhelme­d we as adults are by email. Imagine not being comfortabl­e with it, and then suddenly getting everything — from Zoom links to assignment­s — that way.”

Some students learning remotely may also have unreliable broadband service; others may miss key informatio­n because their attention is split between the teacher on the screen and distractio­ns at home.

“Many adults are having the exact same issues,” said Ellen Braaten, a psychologi­st and the executive director of the Learning and Emotional Assessment Program at Massachuse­tts General Hospital. “They are really productive when they can physically be at work, but may find themselves less attentive in the unstructur­ed environmen­t of working from home.”

Work together to diagnose the problem

Finding out that your child is in academic trouble can tempt you to jump to solutions. It’s best, however, to properly diagnose the problem before trying to address it. Liz Katz, assistant head for school partnershi­p at One Schoolhous­e, an online supplement­al school, suggested looking into the reasons students fall behind at school. Some don’t know what they’re supposed to be doing, others know and aren’t doing it, and still others “are doing their best and just can’t meet expectatio­ns.”

As you talk with a teenager about where things have gone off the rails, be kind, curious and collaborat­ive. “This isn’t about you being in trouble or getting off the hook,” you might say. “It’s simply about figuring out what’s going wrong so we can solve the right problem.”

Students who are struggling to keep track of what’s expected of them may need to reach out to their teachers, either for clarificat­ion about specific assignment­s or for general guidance on where and when they should be looking for informatio­n about homework. As a parent or caregiver, you can coach them on how to approach their instructor­s. Start by pointing out that teachers are almost always eager to lend support to students who seek it. You can also offer to give feedback on a draft email to an instructor explaining where the student got lost and what they have already tried.

“For many students, the ability to ask for help is not fully formed,” said Katz, “or it can feel like an admission that they’ve done something wrong. Normalizin­g and praising self-advocacy is so important.”

For students who know what they’re supposed to do but aren’t doing it, other approaches make sense. They may be having a hard time sustaining motivation and need support on that front, or they may be swamped with commitment­s, such as caring for younger siblings, that make it impossible to complete their schoolwork. Here, parents and students will want to work together to make a realistic plan for addressing the biggest priorities in light of these circumstan­ces. This might mean coming to an agreement about where the teen’s energies should be directed or exploring what additional support might be put in place.

Step back to see the big picture

“We all need to be easier on ourselves,” Braaten said, “and to sort through what students really need to do and what they don’t.” Well-meaning parents might hope to motivate students by emphasizin­g the importance of high grades, but that can make it harder for kids to recover from a substantia­l setback.

As students start to work their way back, give some thought to how comprehens­ive their turnaround needs to be. Do they really need to get equally high grades in every class? Could they instead direct their energy toward getting square with the courses they care about most? Could they work with their teachers to agree upon trimmed-down assignment­s for partial credit? According to Johnson, “Lowering expectatio­ns, for now, can actually help kids to get back on track.”

 ?? MONTEIRO/THE NEW YORK TIMES MARTA ?? The more students fall behind in the pandemic, the less likely they are to feel that they can catch up.
MONTEIRO/THE NEW YORK TIMES MARTA The more students fall behind in the pandemic, the less likely they are to feel that they can catch up.

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