Sunday, October 3, 2010
CED525 Class 4 Homework & Practice
I was very interested in chapter 10, homework & practice. I think too many teachers assign homework for the wrong reasons. The book stated that "homework should provide opportunities for students to deepen their understanding of the content and gain proficiency with their skills". I see teachers giving homework, just to give it. It's busy work that doesn't have a great deal of relevance. Teachers who give crossword puzzles drive me crazy! Why? What is the true assessment? I personally think it's simply busy work. I'd hope that most teachers in the profession have moved past this type of homework. It needs reinforce and deepen the understanding of the content presented. Students need a reason to do homework and they should feel like their learning from it. Design homework that clearly tells the purpose and outcome. I think the students have a right to know why their doing it. I believe that students should be able to see the learning objectives and overall outcome of the unit, or lesson being studied. This gives them an idea of where they are starting and where they need to go. Mastering a skill takes time and a large amount of practice. Not just any type of practice, or review, but meaningful practice. This chapter was full of great ideas and ways to enhance assessment while using technology. The last point I wanted to make was on the amount of homework children get. I always feel bad hearing parents tell "horror" stories about homework. Most of the time the teacher could have prevented such situations. Busy work not only burdens and hinders a childs learning, or want to learn, but it puts a strain on parents. I hear stories time and time again of parents sitting at the kitchen table for hours with their crying child. They talk about their child "shutting down" and not being able to finish the homework. Well, I would shut down as well if I had to do 50 math problems that were ALL the same. I agree with drill and practice, but where do we draw the line for our children? I don't mean to pick on math teachers, but that was a common example of this problem. The bottom line is that we need to make our objectives clear to our students. Make sure they know the purpose of the work. I wouldn't want to do a bunch of work for no reason, so why should they.
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Christy,
ReplyDeleteI couldn't agree with you more on homework. I, too, still see teachers handing out "pointless" homework assignments that don't have a real purpose. This only makes our students more against homework. If the homework reinforces an objective or pushes the student to practice skills they will need (not like how to do a crossword puzzle) then, it can be called homework!
Christy,
ReplyDeleteYou make some excellent points about homework and how it needs to have a purpose and how that purpose needs to be known by the students. If students can see how and why they can positively benefit from a homework assignment, they are more likely to complete it and do well on it. With my library classes, I do not give homework because I feel they have enough with their regular classes, and it is something I feel I don't need to do. But in the future if it is something I will have to assign, I will remember to give it a purpose and have students understand why it is important and meaningful.
Christy, I like your discussion about "extra" homework. I have experienced that with many of our teachers in our building that just give homework because they think they need to give it. It is frustrating for parents and students. Unless there is a deep purpose for students to do research etc. why give it.
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