Some American high schools do give way too much homework, but the cause of this is almost certainly that each subject teacher wants the very best for their students, and believe that giving them some homework is the most effective way of doing so - without realising how much work they are actually assigning to students that are keen to maintain a high GPA.
Do students have too much homework? It’s a question that is debated by teachers, parents, researchers, and students alike. Homework instills values like discipline and time management and helps students develop their study skills. However, students are already in school for most of their day. Should they dedicate a large portion of hometime.
Because there is not enough homework at schools. I think that the homework should be on paper since it's a pain for all parents. I don't think that having limited homework will prepare students for high school where there is more homework. We need more pressure to encourage student success and the guaranteed 30 credits to earn the OSSD.
Elementary School Kids Getting Too Much Homework, Study Shows Tweet A study published in the American Journal of Family Therapy has shown that students in the earlier years of elementary school are getting more homework than education leaders suggest they receive — and sometimes as many as three times the recommended amount.
Homework provides a great opportunity for you to tell your child how important school is. Be positive about it. The attitude you express about homework will be the attitude your kid acquires. Be a role model. When your kid does homework, don’t sit and watch TV (not even the Discovery Channel). If they’re reading, you read too.
Kids have three times too much homework, study finds - CNN.com. Close. 85. Posted by 4 years ago.. I don't give homework- Sometimes kids have to finish something at home, but that's about it.. If 120 minutes in high school is too much, wait until they get to college -or worse yet, an actual job where this sort of coddling does not happen.
Robert Pressman, PhD, and colleagues recently investigated the 10-minute rule among more than 1,100 students, and found that elementary-school kids were receiving up to three times as much homework as recommended. As homework load increased, so did family stress, the researchers found (American Journal of Family Therapy, 2015).