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elleng

(136,071 posts)
Sun Nov 26, 2017, 11:24 PM Nov 2017

Some Schools Are Abolishing Homework In Favor Of Reading, And That's A Good Thing.

'This September, the 20,000 elementary school students of Florida’s Marion County public school district will enter school with the promise that they will not be doing any more homework as part of their daily school life. The policy is introduced by the county’s new superintendent Heidi Maier. She motivated her decision with research that shows that homework does not improve achievement for younger students, but time free from school type activities is important for their development. The policy will exclude some occasional assignments, like science projects or research papers.

The no homework policy is a rarity in the U.S., where the demanding emphasis on standardized test scores leads to a constant pressure, on students and teachers, for rigorous preparation starting as early as possible. In Finland, however, where students have consistently been amongst the top performers on international academic assessment tests like PISA, homework is not considered an important tool for academic success (nor are standardized tests considered an important tool for its measurement).

In addition to doing away with homework, Maier will encourage parents to spend quality time with their kids each evening, reading to them for at least 20 minutes. While there is no solid evidence that homework is beneficial for academic success in younger kids, there is plenty of evidence that reading is. Maier cited the work of Richard Allington as support for her decision. Allington is a professor of education at the University of Tennessee, and has dedicated his career on studying early literacy.'>>>

http://bigthink.com/design-for-good/why-reading-to-a-kid-about-anything-is-better-than-homework?

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Some Schools Are Abolishing Homework In Favor Of Reading, And That's A Good Thing. (Original Post) elleng Nov 2017 OP
and teachers waste huge amts of time reading and "grading" the stuff nt msongs Nov 2017 #1
Wow! radical noodle Nov 2017 #2
In Finland, the arts are strongly and seriously included in the school day... fierywoman Nov 2017 #3
That depends on the school you go to. Igel Nov 2017 #5
Very good! Thx for the OP. Alice11111 Nov 2017 #4

radical noodle

(8,590 posts)
2. Wow!
Mon Nov 27, 2017, 12:24 AM
Nov 2017

That's the county in Florida where I live. Good for them! I'd read about the new superintendent and the big shake-up in the schools, but I hadn't heard about this.

fierywoman

(8,105 posts)
3. In Finland, the arts are strongly and seriously included in the school day...
Mon Nov 27, 2017, 12:32 AM
Nov 2017

...I just read recently that the majority of Nobel prize winners knew how to play music!

Igel

(36,086 posts)
5. That depends on the school you go to.
Mon Nov 27, 2017, 07:45 PM
Nov 2017

I have lots of kids in mariachi band, jazz band, choir, orchestra, concert and marching band.

3000 kids. 400 in band. 300 in orchestra.

However, as with the effect of studying music and taking lessons, the effect and cause are flipped. Those with discipline and who put out effort continue with music. Those who don't, don't.

Those with discipline and who put out effect do well in their studies. Those who don't, don't.

It was a hard-fought claim to evaluate, but the evidence finally came down on that version of the claim.

Now parenting, in enforcing practice times and such, can help. But again, it's not "the music made me more disciplined, more resilient, and therefore able to succeed in math, science, and history" but "my parents made me more disciplined, built on my resilience, and made me better able to succeed in music, math, science and history."

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