That's a good idea, see what it's been like for kids who have taken the actual classes.
Is that one hour per class per night or is that one hour *total* per night? I just asked DD about homework, school & life in general and here is what she has to say on the subject:
(From agnes!' DD)...
Not everyone who complains about hours and hours of homework is making it up. Sometimes, hours and hours of homework actually is assigned. One cannot base what everyone else says off their own experiences. It is rude to insinuate that anyone who complains about too much homework is lazy, because like you said, every school and every teacher is DIFFERENT. At my school, there are kids who are signed up for the same course, but have different teachers. In one particular case, my teacher assigned a lot of homework throughout the year. My class was going several readings a night and taking obscure fill-in-the-blank quizzes. The other classes were taking online, open-notes quizzes once-a-week. The level and workload of the two classes were at completely different levels, but the course that was on our schedules was supposed to be the same. It remained this way throughout most of the year, until we took our final. The opposite happened for me in another class. I got the teacher that doesn't assign massive amounts of homework, but the other teacher does. I talk to the kids who have the other classes, and they get hours of homework each night. I get around half an hour of homework each night. It isn't that they're sitting around listening to music and eternally chatting with friends on Facebook and texting and IMing, it's that they really do have more homework than me. I'm sure it's not at all unusual for this to happen within a school, so I have no problem believing that there are differences between schools all across the country. There are classes that will have it easier than I did, and classes that WILL have it harder. That doesn't mean that they are making it up, and being irresponsible. Sometimes, they're just being honest.
I agree that massive amounts of homework in and if itself does not make a class challenging but I also think that a challenging class can have massive amounts of homework. I know because we've lived that scenario. And at first I wasn't going to post in reply to your other points but here goes...
I am glad that you are proud of your kids, glad that you are proud of your kids' schools, glad that you are proud of the state of education in Minnesota.
What I don't understand is why you historically seem to imply in your 'education' posts that educational opportunities in other states are somewhat or somehow inferior to a degree...especially high schools and community colleges. And what's funny is I agree with some of your points like the amount of homework not being a true indicator of a teacher's success in teaching a subject, BUT the way you said it! C'mon, how would you like it if I phrased a post this way (hypthetically-speaking only!)...
"I know someone who is enrolled in one of the Top Ten school systems in the country and is being heavily recruited by Ivy League/top-tier schools and has three to four hours of home work almost every single night...you people who have kids with ONLY one hour of homework? Your kids will be missing the boat for college."
NOW, I DO NOT BELIEVE THAT, but the attitude that drips off my pretend quoted-post above is probably fairly clear. And, in my opinion, the attitude that drips off your actual statements regarding your kids' high school experiences?...
Anyway, back to the OP...
princesspumpkin - maybe talk to some other parents & kids from the local high school who have taken the honors classes? Your DD has to be very sure that she can handle the workload. I also think punkin's DD's experience with rising to the challenge is a consideration. If much is expected of *your* student, does she have a tendency to rise to that challenge?
And about getting 'placed' in groupings... In our case, there was a GT grouping in place in the local middle school and DD was not placed in it, *yet* she took all 'honor' classes in middle school and took two high-school classes in 8th-grade, is taking multiple AP courses in high school, has at almost every turn out-achieved (grade-wise, standardized tests, etc.) most of the kids who were placed in that GT group, so getting 'placed' or 'anointed' as being in the "special-group" is not always everything it's cracked up to be.
agnes!