I'll just speak to our experience with homework...
IMO assigning pages of homework (let's say 50 math problems) doesn't seem to teach anything more than just assigning 10 problems would.
And also, in our experience, a lot of homework comes across as busywork. I understand that there might be some serious pedagogical reason for assigning "projects" (eek!) or pages of homework, but most of the time? As a parent and as a family? We've just gritted our teeth and gotten through it.
After young teachers have kids and they then experience life from the other side of the desk, they usually seem to have a keener appreciation of how hard it can be from the parents' point of view.
agnes!
This was In a hurry's reply...
I agree. Doing 50 math problems incorrectly merely makes it worse. If you know how to do them, 5 or 10 for review is fine.
And I understood parents so much more when I became one! They really do make you think you know so much about kids when you are going through school. Probably 50% was accurate in my view.
I'll just speak to our experience with homework...
....
agnes!
And this is lfontaine's reply to my post...
Um, it's called "practice". To get good at something, you have to practice. The teacher has to formulate homework for the average student. There is no way they can tailor 24 different homework assignments for 24 different students to meet their individual needs or they would get nothing done and everyone's education would go down the toilet. They have to formulate for the average student. And they determined that, on average, it takes 50 problems worth of practice to understand the material.
According to you, the teacher teaches it in the class and no homework is needed because the teacher's description of the material should be enough.
Um, so glad that you are an expert in what I am thinking on this subject. All I said was that in *my* experience as a parent, assigning pages of homework or 50 math problems does not seem to help, as in... "assigning pages of homework (let's say 50 math problems) doesn't seem to teach anything more than just assigning 10 problems would".
You have mischaracterized what I posted.
Nowhere did I state that the teacher had to formulate completely different lesson plans for every single student in class.
Nowhere did I state that "the teacher teaches it in the class and no homework is needed because the teacher's description of the material should be enough."
Again, what I actually said was...
"assigning pages of homework (let's say 50 math problems) doesn't seem to teach anything more than just assigning 10 problems would." I did *not* state that
no homework was needed.
As I stated earlier. If a child knows the concept, 5 to 10 problems (average) is enough to enforce. If they don't know it, 50 is hell, and will only reinforce wrong procedures. Oftentimes it is 50, because that is what is on their worksheet.
If they don't know it, they STILL won't know it after 5 to 10 problems. What do you suggest for the students that don't get it after lecture, 5, 10, or 100 practice problems? I don't think the teacher can take class time to spend with one child when the rest of the class is ready to move on. Perhaps a tutor is in order for this child.
From the beginning I stated I was
only speaking to our family's experiences with homework overload.
And for the students who already understand the subject-matter, why should they have to do the pages of homework or the 50 math problems for every day they have math class?
What does doing all that homework teach any of the students? I know the amounts of time students are supposed to be spending on their homework according to guidelines, but in my experience those guidelines are a pathetic joke. Ask students how much time they actually spend on homework and the answers would probably shock you. In our school system it is *hours* every day and *that* is for all the students at all levels. I honestly don't know how students today have any kind of life outside of class + homework.
I just don't see the value of repetition for repetition's sake. I thought rote learning and memorization had supposedly been discredited

in modern educational literature.
And to the poster who hates the "when teachers become parents" line...what I said was that...
"After young teachers have kids and they then experience life from the other side of the desk, they usually seem to have a keener appreciation of how hard it can be from the parents' point of view." I did not disparage all kid-less teachers, I just said that after becoming parents they then seem to have more of an appreciation how hard it can be from the parents' side of the equation.
I think practice makes permanent, not "practice makes perfect". The kid who doesn't understand the class, after all that fruitless homework,
really doesn't understand the subject now. The kid who hates English
really hates it now. And maybe the kid who got it in class, wonders why they have to spend all that time doing homework.
It was so sad, when school was over this year my child said "now I'm going to actually have time to
read".
agnes!