USA TODAY US Edition

Homework load unchanged

Despite parents’ concerns about more work, study finds burden has barely changed over 30 years.

- Greg Toppo @gtoppo USATODAY

Parents’ concerns about everexpand­ing homework assignment­s for their children may be misguided, according to new research suggesting that students’ homework burdens have barely changed in 30 years.

The share of 17-year-olds who said they had one to two hours of homework dropped from 27% in 1984 to 23% in 2012, according to a report today in the annual Brown Center Report on American Education, sponsored by the Brookings Institutio­n, a liberal think tank. The percentage who spent more than two hours a night on homework remained unchanged at 13%.

In a separate survey by researcher­s at the University of California-Los Angeles, the percentage of college freshmen nationwide who recalled having six or more hours of homework a week during their senior year in high school dropped from 50% in 1986 to 38% in 2012.

“It still doesn’t look like kids are overworked,” says researcher Tom Loveless, a longtime education researcher who conducted the Brookings study.

The findings come amid complaints by some parents that their children’s homework load is out of control. In one recent survey, 46% of parents in Bernards Township, N.J., said their children spend too much time on homework. Only 4.6% said their kids don’t have enough homework.

Some school districts are considerin­g time limits on homework and a few are considerin­g making homework optional.

More 17-year-olds reported having no homework at all. From 1984 to 2012, the percentage who said they had “none assigned” grew from 22% to 27%. Another 11% said they had homework but didn’t do it, a figure unchanged over 28 years.

The only significan­t increase in homework, the NAEP study found, was for 9-year-olds. In 1984, 35% reported no homework the previous night. By 2012, that had shrunk to 22%. The share of students reporting less than an hour of homework rose from 41% to 57%. The percentage of 9-yearolds with an hour or more of homework shrank by 2 percentage points, from 19% to 17%.

Loveless says previous research has suggested that parents who complain about homework are often already “alienated from the school” for other reasons.

“This is the group that would be overwhelme­d by homework — they’re preparing for college,” Loveless says.

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