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High School Homework: Are American Students Overworked?

Teen Books

  First Posted: 11/02/11 03:56 PM ET Updated: 11/05/11 07:50 PM ET

This is a teen-written article from our friends at Teenink.com.

A young girl sits at her desk, reviewing her homework assignments for the evening. English: read three chapters and write a journal response. Math: complete 30 problems, showing all work. Science: do a worksheet, front and back. French: study vocabulary for tomorrow's test. It's going to be a long night.

This describes a typical weeknight for students across the country. Now is the time to start a homework revolution.

According to guidelines endorsed by the National Education Association (NEA), a student should be assigned no more than 10 minutes per grade level per night. For example, a first grader should only have 10 minutes of homework, a second grader, 20 minutes, and so on. This means that a student in my grade -- seventh -- should have no more than 70 minutes of work each night. Yet this is often doubled, sometimes even tripled!

There are negatives to overloading students. Have you ever heard of a child getting sick because of homework? According to William Crain, Ph.D., a professor of psychology at City College of New York and the author of Reclaiming Childhood, "Kids are developing more school-related stomachaches, headaches, sleep problems, and depression than ever before." The average student is glued to his or her desk for almost seven hours a day. Add two to four hours of homework each night, and they are working a 45 to 55 hour week!

In addition, a student who receives excessive homework "will miss out on active playtime, essential for learning social skills, proper brain development, and warding off childhood obesity," according to Harris Cooper, Ph.D., a professor of psychology and neuroscience at Duke University.

Everybody knows that teachers are the ones who assign homework, but they do not deserve all the blame. "Many teachers are under greater pressure than ever before," says Kylene Beers, president of the National Council for Teachers of English and the author of When Kids Can't Read What Teachers Can Do. "Some of it comes from parents, some from the administration and the desire for high scores on standardized tests." Teachers who are under pressure feel the need to assign more homework. But why aren't teachers aware of the NEA homework recommendations? Many have never heard of them, have never taken a course about good versus bad homework, how much to give, and the research behind it. And many colleges of education do not offer specific training in homework. Teachers are just winging it.

Although some teachers and parents believe that assigning a lot of homework is beneficial, a Duke University review of a number of studies found almost no correlation between homework and long-term achievements in elementary school and only a moderate correlation in middle school. "More is not better," concluded Cooper, who conducted the review.

Is homework really necessary? Most teachers assign homework as a drill to improve memorization of material. While drills and repetitive exercises have their place in schools, homework may not be that place. If a student does a math worksheet with 50 problems but completes them incorrectly, he will likely fail the test. According to the U.S. Department of Education, most math teachers can tell after checking five algebraic equations whether a student understood the necessary concepts. Practicing dozens of homework problems incorrectly only cements the wrong method.

Some teachers believe that assigning more homework will help improve standardized test scores. However, in countries like the Czech Republic, Japan, and Denmark, which have higher-scoring students, teachers give little homework. The United States is among the most homework-intensive countries in the world for seventh and eighth grade, so more homework clearly does not mean a higher test score.

Some people argue that homework toughens kids up for high school, college, and the workforce. Too much homework is sapping students' strength, curiosity, and most importantly, their love of learning. Is that really what teachers and parents want?

Do students in the United States receive too much homework? If schools assign less homework, it would benefit teachers, parents, and students alike. Teachers who assign large amounts of homework are often unable to do more than spot-check answers. This means that many errors are missed. Teachers who assign less homework will be able to check it thoroughly. In addition, it allows a teacher time to focus on more important things. "I had more time for planning when I wasn't grading thousands of problems a night," says math teacher Joel Wazac at a middle school in Missouri. "And when a student didn't understand something, instead of a parent trying to puzzle it out, I was there to help them." The result of assigning fewer math problems: grades went up and the school's standardized math scores are the highest they've ever been. A student who is assigned less homework will live a healthy and happy life. The family can look forward to stress-free, carefree nights and, finally, the teachers can too.

Some schools are already taking steps to improve the issue. For example, Mason-Rice Elementary School in Newton, Massachusetts, has limited homework, keeping to the "10 minute rule." Raymond Park Middle School in Indianapolis has written a policy instructing teachers to "assign homework only when you feel the assignment is valuable." The policy also states, "A night off is better than homework which serves no worthwhile purpose." Others, such as Oak Knoll Elementary School in Menlo Park, California, have considered eliminating homework altogether. If these schools can do it, why can't everyone?

So, my fellow Americans, it's time to stop the insanity. It's time to start a homework revolution.

- SpaceKing800, Glen Rock, NJ



This piece has also been published in Teen Ink's monthly print magazine.



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This is a teen-written article from our friends at Teenink.com. A young girl sits at her desk, reviewing her homework assignments for the evening. English: read three chapters and write a journal r...
This is a teen-written article from our friends at Teenink.com. A young girl sits at her desk, reviewing her homework assignments for the evening. English: read three chapters and write a journal r...
 
 
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02:44 AM on 11/27/2011
"English: read three chapters and write a journal response. Math: complete 30 problems, showing all work. Science: do a worksheet, front and back. French: study vocabulary for tomorrow's test. It's going to be a long night." I have even more homework than THIS daily. And I'm only in 6th grade! This is just outrageous!! I have about 5 hours of homework each night, sometimes even more!! We all need to spread this article around. This has some very valid points!
05:23 PM on 11/12/2011
As a university professor of Psychology, I would suggest keeping the school day short and keeping a reasonable amount ( 2 hours max) of homework in the program. We learn effectively through practice. Information has to be processed in a form that is meaningful and organized. Practicing skills, reviewing new information,and trying to make meaningful connections to your current store of information usually require some individual study time. Also, doing homework on your own will train you to build study skills that will be useful to you throughout your careers.
06:24 PM on 11/13/2011
I agree that adults in college and trade school can benefit from practice/homework in developing their skill sets. It is meaningful and organized by virtue of being relevant to the student. However, I don't think it's true of high school and especially elementary aged students. "training to build study skills" is too general at younger stages for it to be really useful - especially in the standardized education world where students' individual interests and passions are disregarded.

2 hours of arbitrary homework a day is too much waste of precious childhood time.
03:28 PM on 11/12/2011
Homework SUCKS!
If homework is stressing your kids and ruining family time, you should stand up to the school and the teachers. Yes, your child might get a bad grade for missing his/her homework, but luckily grades don't matter in real life.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FiredUpRTG
Don't start no stuff; won't be no stuff…
05:13 PM on 11/13/2011
Nah, once 10 years out of college, grades don't matter, unless you're being scrutinized as a presidential candidate.

But until those 10 years, grades matter for high school getting into college, which could affect those next 10 years and past that…
06:12 PM on 11/13/2011
If you buy into the big corporate scam that college is, then yes, grades (especially in high school) matter. But you don't need good grades to get a college education. To get a college education, you don't even need grades or have graduated from high school.
12:56 PM on 11/09/2011
"Some people argue that homework toughens kids up for high school, college, and the workforce."

LOL riiiiight

"Teachers who assign less homework will be able to check it thoroughly. In addition, it allows a teacher time to focus on more important things. "I had more time for planning when I wasn't grading thousands of problems a night," says math teacher Joel Wazac at a middle school in Missouri. "And when a student didn't understand something, instead of a parent trying to puzzle it out, I was there to help them." The result of assigning fewer math problems: grades went up and the school's standardized math scores are the highest they've ever been"

Thank you.This is a great way to teach,especially on math.
10:24 AM on 11/09/2011
As a teacher who rarely assigns much homework, and a parent who struggles with a first grader at home who at times has upwards of 45 minutes of homework each night, I would like to URGE teachers to reconsider WHY they are giving so much homework. When I first started teaching, I gave at least 10-15 minutes of homework per night, because that's what I was told to do. Now, the majority of the homework assignments I give is to use specific websites to practice concepts we cover in class, or find another meaningful way to practice what they learned in class. I have many more students coming to class saying "My sister was watching Dora and I understood everything she said in Spanish!" To me, that's a valid assessment of learning. My daughter, who is only 7 often has at least 20-30 minutes of homework each night! I agree there should be a rigorous academic program, and that learning must continue when students leave the classroom, but sitting at the kitchen table for a half an hour with a 7 year old who already understands the concepts, but has busy work is not productive. Therefore, I use that time to extend the questions she has to answer and make her think beyond the worksheet. Unfortunately, most parents are not trained teachers, so most kids are simply going through the motions and mastering the art of homework completion (right or wrong).
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rodjard
I Update my brain frequently
05:54 PM on 11/07/2011
Abe Lincoln never had a college degree nor much of a quality
formal education. Neither did Samual Clements, which is true
of many great leaders and inspirers in American history.
What they did have was the unimpeded freedom to express
their diverse individual selves from real experiences in real life.
Yes, we need to educate how to communicate the written words
that flow from unaltered thoughts that flow through our minds.
Yes we need to know how to postulate certain theories, question
them and build on them in math and science.
Their seems to be an underlying endeavor to load people down
with lots of rhetoric of very little real substance and let them
flounder in it.
11:36 PM on 11/06/2011
I am a senior in high school at a private high school taking 4 AP classes, so I know to expect a lot of homework. However, the amount of homework I receive is ridiculous. This article is spot on. I receive 4-5 hours of homework a night! I had to quit my job in order to keep up with all of it. Each teacher thinks that his or her class is the most important and, frankly, the only class that matters. Attitudes like that keep me up until 3 in the morning gulping down Red Bull. I can't remember the last time I wasn't tired or depressed. I am supposed to be applying to colleges as well as completing my homework, but there just aren't enough hours in the day!! What happened to senior year being the best? Or being a blow off year? What happened to enjoying high school! I missed plenty of football games because I was simply too tired to go out on a Friday night.
The worst part is that I just don't feel like my time spent in class is productive! My teachers either go over 50 Calculus problems that all demonstrate the same concept, or they spend 70 minutes lecturing about something that I could learn in 5 minutes from reading in a book. I'm all for different teaching methods, but let's be practical here!
10:04 AM on 11/07/2011
I took 5 AP classes and a class at a local private college my senior year of high school, and I can definitely relate. My main objection is to tedious homework, such as the 50 calculus problems over the same concept. I've been there! A lot of homework isn't *necessarily* a bad thing in and of itself, but it needs to be actually teaching students something.

As a sidenote- I'm in college now, and don't worry, tedious homework is actually fairly rare. Assignments here are much more designed to help students learn. It gets better!
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ThomasPaine1776
Left is right; Right is wrong
09:35 PM on 11/07/2011
I'm a history teacher and i NEVER assign homework.

I figure if I can't do my job in 5 hours a week, i need to try harder, or get to the point faster.

My STAR test scores are the highest in the district, according to someone who has access to the scores. Same for the year before.

Also, if I assign homework, kids like you will do it. The kids that sit in the back, won't. Homework measures the home life, nothing else. I could take an expo marker and walk up to a map of the district and circle one area, point to it and say "Those kids will do their homework." and then circle another area of the district and say "And those kids won't."

And it has nothing to do with either of the kids. It's not up to them. They are both products of their environment, so what's the point? Why am I going to assign something that I know will only put even more space between the classes of kids?

The kids who DO their homework don't need to do it, since they got the concept in class from me the first time I said it.

And you're right about your assumption that teachers assign homework just to make themselves look good to admin and other teachers. They look down on me for not assigning homework; so do parents. I don't care. They are both wrong and I am right.
11:36 PM on 11/06/2011
All in all, it is clear to me that something needs to change. Class time needs to be more productive, and homework should actually serve a purpose!! What's the point if my understanding of the subject is the same before AND after completing the homework?
10:31 PM on 11/06/2011
wayyyy too much homework, i get like 3 hours per night and im in 9th grade
10:21 PM on 11/06/2011
This article really nails it. I graduated high school a little over two years ago, and I had a few AP classes. This will give you more work to do, since they were college level, but oh my god, I remember being up til 2 or even 3 in the morning and having to be up at 6. My grades suffered, and I suffered too. I became depressed, I was always tired, and I ate maybe once a day if I could manage it. My friends had it just as bad or even worse. Even our weekends were packed with homework. If we could have had breaks from school, we would have benefitted a lot, physically and emotionally. Schoolwork is for school, period.
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autofreak112
09:23 PM on 11/06/2011
COMPLETELY RIGHT! Finally, these people are learning! Homework was m LIFE in high school. I had no time for myself. You people lock children in these schools for hours on end, do you think it's healthy to not let them go home and be kids??? I never got enough sleep and never lost stress. Like this article says, I even got sick. Please emulate countries who know what they're doing. Stop piling on the homework, kids deserve a break. If you can't teach children while they're IN school, what's the point of school??? Just give them online assignments.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ThomasPaine1776
Left is right; Right is wrong
09:44 PM on 11/07/2011
By the way, college is EASY. There is NO homework. None. Ever.

Don't ever take an AP class. AP classes exist to make teachers look good, admin look good and parents get to brag on you. You end up living life for THEM. F them, this is YOUR life.

Don't be in such a hurry. Talk to a girl. Go to a football game. Hang out in the parking lot.

I've been to college and let me tell you, it was breeze. A drunken, fun fun fun time. I went to a well respected (US News & World Report ranked it the number 2 best regional school at the time I applied) and I was on the baseball team with a bunch of guys that took a bunch of AP courses and they all said College is EASY! and that they were surprized how easy it was.

Relax.

Tell your parents to relax too.
08:52 PM on 11/06/2011
I am a junior in High school and I actually left my high school for this reason. I had 2 hours a night in 7th grade. I had 3-4 hours in 8th grade. I had 4-5 hours of homework in 9th grade all year long. Most of this homework was because my teacher wasn't teaching during class! I am now enrolled with K12 international and I can spend 1 hour per class on 6-7 classes and I get twice as much work done in that hour than the teacher does in school. This allowed me to learn more and only have about an hour of homework a night. I have learned way more in the last 1 1/2 years than I did in 7th,8th, and 9th grade! I am glad I switched because now I have time to see friends, work, and ride horses. I would tell anyone to try online accredited education!
02:40 AM on 11/27/2011
You think that's bad? I spend at least 5 hours each night on homework, and sometimes even longer! And I'm only in 6th grade!
07:39 PM on 11/06/2011
thank you so much for posting this article! i'm a senior in high school, all honors courses, so of course i expect a little more than ten minutes of homework. throughout high school, each honors class has given a minimum of 1 hour of homework every night. mind you, i have nine periods in my high school day, 40 minutes each. some of our students do zero- period gym and have ten periods.one is lunch, and one is gym, leaving seven academic classes. four of those are honors classes- math, history, English, and science- and the other three average 30 minutes of homework, depending on what you take. so i'm out of school at 2:16, then i have an after school activity until 3:30, then i get home by 4 and start my homework. in the past, i've skipped meals, and been up to 2am trying to finish my homework, then i'm up at 6. See, honors kids especially follow the magic number four- 4 hours of sleep, 4 coffees, 4.0. those are the only things that matter, because we need to keep our grades up, and succeed in life.
02:58 AM on 11/27/2011
Exactly. I'm in both honors classes. I'm the only boy in my grade that is in both honors classes. Of course the teachers have high expectations for me and all the other students in the honors classes, but this much homework? Really? I spend 5+ hours on homework every night. I'm only in 6th grade! My Advanced Math and English teachers were surprised when I got a D+ in English and a C in Math. I'm AMAZING in Math, and great in English. That's why I got put in both the Advanced classes! But this amount of work is just ridiculous! If you know we're so smart, why are you working us so hard on stuff that we've already known!?
07:01 PM on 11/06/2011
This article hit the nail right on the head. As a junior in college I'm really beginning to question whether all of my years in school have really been worth it. Of course I value what education has to offer, but my God. Sometimes I feel like it all has no real value. I feel that not only are American students overworked and overstressed but so are American workers and adults. We work the most hours, have the smallest amount of time off.. it just doesn't add up for a nation who is the most developed in the world...

Anyway, I'd really like to know if any other students out there feel the same way. Even though I'm in college, during high school, I felt that my course-load was just unrealistically heavy...

It's time for a homework revolution, despite the fact that I'll be out of school FOR GOOD in about a year in a half (assuming I don't get my masters)!

If anyone agrees with me, reply me, I'd really like to discuss this topic with other people!
06:14 PM on 11/06/2011
This article speaks the truth. I am a freshman in high school getting only 5 hours of sleep during the week days due to homework and sports, one of which is ironically cheer leading for my high school. I get up at 4:30 every day to do homework BEFORE school, then after school I usually have cheer leading until 6:00 or i'm out at the barn riding horses until 9:00 or both! So usually i'm not in bed until around 11:00-:11:30 every night. I usually have around 2 projects going on, about 5 thought questions, 20-20 math problems, reading, and foreign language vocabulary every night. On the weekends I have sports on both Saturday and Sunday, with homework on top of it. My school gives us NO study hall, the only free time we get is a 30 minute lunch break. I feel like my life is being consumed by homework, I cant even remember the last time I hung out with my friends outside of school and it's only November!