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The Homework Delusion
weeklystandard.com ^ | 03/01/2004 | David Skinner

Posted on 03/01/2004 12:02:24 PM PST by fourfivesix

The Homework Delusion

From the Education Gadfly: What do American students need? More homework!

by David Skinner

AMERICAN STUDENTS are being overworked, says an alarmed chorus of newspapers, magazines, and books. As described by the popular media and even some academics, the crisis is reminiscent of "Sister Carrie" and Industrial era child-labor scandals. "Overbooked: Four Hours of Homework for a Third Grader" blared a recent cover of People magazine. Beyond the headlines and behind the expert quotes, however, one discovers a story of political agendas, manipulated data, and a credulous public that wants to believe children are working oh-so-hard, even when they're barely breaking a sweat.

What gave this story credibility were its academic sponsors, Etta Kralovec and John Buell, authors of "The End of Homework." What robs their oft-cited work of its credibility, however, are their half-cocked research and political fervor. They reference a newspaper article linking a spate of suicides in Hong Kong to excessive homework, except that the article is from a newspaper in Zimbabwe. Homework, they argue, is anti-democratic and "pits students who can against students who can't." Kralovec and Buell sound like fever-swamp socialists, especially when they complain that homework "fits the ideological requirement of those who maintain the status quo in our politics and society."

Yes, there's a kernel of truth to the anti-homework argument. The evidence that homework provides children with an important educational advantage is inconsistent. University of Missouri professor Harris Cooper, a widely recognized expert on the effects of homework, describes only a modest advantage for students who are given homework as compared to students who aren't assigned any. "Teachers of Grades 4, 5, and 6 might expect the average student doing homework to outscore about 52 percent of equivalent no-homework students."

Homework's benefits, however, increase with age and grade level, becoming especially significant in high school. While "homework's effect on the achievement of elementary school students could be described as 'very small,'" says Cooper, "on high school students its effect would be 'large'." Despite homework's uneven effectiveness, Cooper himself favors the practice, though he's skeptical about the benefits of creative homework that's supposed to teach critical skills. Positive effects increased, he has found, "for subjects for which homework assignments are more likely to involve rote learning, practice, or rehearsal." This is particularly interesting since a stock element of the homework-horror stories in the popular press is the complicated interdisciplinary "project" that takes many hours, days even, to finish and reduces many children, and their parents, to tears. But as it turns out, American elementary, middle, and high school students aren't spending hours on their homework. Minutes is more like it.

The standard reference for debates over how children spend their time is the University of Michigan's 1997 Child Development supplement to the Panel Study of Income Dynamics and 1981 Study of Time-Use in Social and Economic Accounts. Recently one of its coauthors, Sandra L. Hofferth, publicly dismissed the whole notion that children are being given so much homework that they have no time for anything else. "I don't believe in the 'hurried child' for a minute. . . .There is a lot of time that can be used for other things." Hofferth and co-author John F. Sandberg have found an increase in homework since 1981 among 3- to 12-year-olds, but the increase is concentrated among the youngest age sets, 3- to 5 and 6- to 8-year-olds. This they credit to an up-tick in the number of students who are doing some homework now but weren't doing any before. So instead of a dangerously increasing rate of homework among all age groups, Hofferth and Sandburg found increases only among those young enough to have never been assigned homework in the past. Tom Loveless of the Brookings Institute recently emphasized this same point as he proceeded to drive a stake into the heart of the homework-as-epidemic news articles: "Almost everything in this story [of overworked students] is wrong."

Even the increase among the youngest students is being blown out of proportion, Loveless explains. The amount of time that 3- to 5-year-olds spend on homework per week has risen by 11 minutes since 1981, raising the total homework burden to 7 minutes per night. The per-night increase for 6- to 8-year-olds stands at 15 minutes. Bringing the total number of minutes surrendered to homework to a hardly-shocking 25 per night.

Among older age groups, there is even evidence that homework is decreasing. The National Assessment of Education Progress reports that in 1988, 17 percent of 13-year-olds said they had received no homework assignments the day before filling out the questionnaire. In 1999, that number climbed to 24 percent. And among high school students, for whom homework has been shown to be rather effective in boosting academic achievement, the hours spent per week on homework is actually falling. In 1987, the UCLA survey of college freshmen found that 47 percent said they spent more than five hours a week doing homework as high school seniors; in 2002, only about one-third of respondents could say the same.

A small number of students may well be carrying an insupportable load of unhelpful homework. The Brookings report notes that 5 percent of fourth graders have more than two hours nightly. Still, the problem is a local rash, not a national crisis. Why then, with such empirical shortcomings, have homework horror stories been treated as sociologically significant? Clearly, American parents want to believe their little angels are so hard-working and such good students, they may be too good. Indeed, too good to be true.

David Skinner is an assistant managing editor of The Weekly Standard and the editor of Doublethink, a quarterly magazine published by America's Future Foundation. A longer version of this article appeared in the Winter 2004 issue of The Public Interest.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: education; homework
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1 posted on 03/01/2004 12:02:26 PM PST by fourfivesix
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To: fourfivesix
It might be interesting to note that Harvard will forgive all fees to students from families with less than $40,000 annual income. The student must get into Harvard in the first place of course. Is Harvard only for rich, liberal families? Ha! Do your homework, maybe you will get the key to the universe--a Harvard diploma.
2 posted on 03/01/2004 12:07:02 PM PST by RightWhale (Theorems link concepts; proofs establish links)
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To: fourfivesix
What gave this story credibility were its academic sponsors, Etta Kralovec and John Buell, authors of "The End of Homework." What robs their oft-cited work of its credibility, however, are their half-cocked research and political fervor. They reference a newspaper article linking a spate of suicides in Hong Kong to excessive homework, except that the article is from a newspaper in Zimbabwe. Homework, they argue, is anti-democratic and "pits students who can against students who can't." Kralovec and Buell sound like fever-swamp socialists, especially when they complain that homework "fits the ideological requirement of those who maintain the status quo in our politics and society."


This includes you homeschool parents. We don't need your children competing against each other. That's not what it's like in the real world. No one out here really competes. (Denote the heavy use of sarcasm)
3 posted on 03/01/2004 12:08:40 PM PST by writer33 (The U.S. Constitution defines a Conservative)
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To: RightWhale
What about the 26 grand tuition??
4 posted on 03/01/2004 12:09:44 PM PST by international american (Kerry has hired a full time clerk to keep track of his lies..........)
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To: fourfivesix
5 percent of fourth graders have more than two hours nightly

Someone could try to prove this to me, but they'd have a real hard time of it.

5 posted on 03/01/2004 12:10:17 PM PST by ClearCase_guy (You can see it coming like a train on a track.)
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To: fourfivesix
What do American students need? More homework!

Easy for you to say...

6 posted on 03/01/2004 12:10:18 PM PST by GiveEmDubya (John Kerry has more baggage than a Samsonite warehouse)
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To: ClearCase_guy
95% dont:)
7 posted on 03/01/2004 12:11:39 PM PST by international american (Kerry has hired a full time clerk to keep track of his lies..........)
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To: fourfivesix
Actually, the confusion is understandable. A certain percentage of American children are working all-out to achieve success in a highly competitive world. They go to private schools, or schools in wealthy suburbs, that are measured by how many students they get into top colleges.

Everybody else is in front of the boob tube, preparing for life as a WalMart greeter.
8 posted on 03/01/2004 12:16:14 PM PST by proxy_user
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To: fourfivesix
"The amount of time that 3- to 5-year-olds spend on homework per week has risen by 11 minutes since 1981, raising the total homework burden to 7 minutes per night."



Ummm...I'm not all that bright...but would they have to start out with a "homework deficit" to make this equation work? And how would one do that???
9 posted on 03/01/2004 12:17:12 PM PST by paulat
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To: fourfivesix
I remember verbatim the wording of a letter that my junior high school sent out to all parents in the mid '60s. It said, "Don't let your child tell you that he has no homework. He has homework--and plenty of it."

Those were less-enlightened days.

10 posted on 03/01/2004 12:17:42 PM PST by Agnes Heep
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To: international american
That's right. Forgiven. Do your homework, young person. Especially if you are from a 'poor,' under $40,000 family.

Maybe this is what Rawls was blabbing about, although I doubt it.

11 posted on 03/01/2004 12:19:52 PM PST by RightWhale (Theorems link concepts; proofs establish links)
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To: international american
We were so poor, we could not afford homework. We envied the kids who had homework.

CG
12 posted on 03/01/2004 12:20:42 PM PST by Conspiracy Guy (The word "Tagline" needs to be added to Free Republic's Spell Check.)
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To: fourfivesix
Could it be that the 3Rs are being pushed entirely into homework because there is no time left in the day after all the social engineering instruction?

-PJ

13 posted on 03/01/2004 12:21:37 PM PST by Political Junkie Too (It's not safe yet to vote Democrat.)
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To: proxy_user
Everybody else is in front of the boob tube, preparing for life as a WalMart greeter.

Should school teach one what one needs to get and do a job? Or should school prepare one for starting and running one's own business? Jobs are apparently from a bygone era. Too bad TV doesn't teach more how to think rather than what product to buy.

14 posted on 03/01/2004 12:23:48 PM PST by RightWhale (Theorems link concepts; proofs establish links)
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To: ClearCase_guy
"5 percent of fourth graders have more than two hours nightly"

Yeah,right.

I find it hard to believe that the N.E.A would allow one of their minions to work hard enough to assign and/or correct two hours of homework.
15 posted on 03/01/2004 12:24:37 PM PST by Redcoat LI ("If you're going to shoot,shoot,don't talk" Tuco BenedictoPacifico Juan Maria Ramirez)
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To: writer33
This includes you homeschool parents. We don't need your children competing against each other. That's not what it's like in the real world. No one out here really competes. (Denote the heavy use of sarcasm)

LOL! Loved the quote you referenced in your post! Actually, as a homeschool parent, I can tell you that my son has NO "homework" to do at night. School continues until the lessons are complete. End of story.

I find it fascinating that the "experts" claim the amount of homework is rising, while other "experts" tell us that the amount of time a child spends parked in front of a television is also rising. Seems contradictory to me, but I'm just a little ole country boy. (Note skillful use of wide-eyed innocence.)

16 posted on 03/01/2004 12:26:42 PM PST by TontoKowalski
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To: Conspiracy Guy
Reminds me of a friend who won a full scholarship to Harvard, and then the Harvard Medical school....and he was white.

Admissions officer: Why do you want to transfer from Rutgers to Harvard?

Answer: I want to get into Harvard Medical School!

Admissions officer: You can apply to Harvard Med if you do very well at Rutgers!

Yeah, I can apply, but I won't get in!

Harvard accepted him for transfer:)
17 posted on 03/01/2004 12:27:25 PM PST by international american (Kerry has hired a full time clerk to keep track of his lies..........)
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To: Conspiracy Guy
"I am tempted to steal this....in fact I will!!
18 posted on 03/01/2004 12:28:55 PM PST by international american (Kerry has hired a full time clerk to keep track of his lies..........)
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To: fourfivesix
later
19 posted on 03/01/2004 12:29:00 PM PST by independentmind
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To: paulat
"The amount of time that 3- to 5-year-olds spend on homework per week has risen by 11 minutes since 1981, raising the total homework burden to 7 minutes per night."
Ummm...I'm not all that bright...but would they have to start out with a "homework deficit" to make this equation work? And how would one do that???
Nope - they're mixing units on you. Risen 11 minutes per week to produce 7 minutes per night - meaning an increase of about 2 minutes per night.
Of course, for these kids, that basically translates to one more page of reading - not a bad thing, is it?
20 posted on 03/01/2004 12:29:18 PM PST by jaj_dad
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