I watch a little girl after school everyday (DD10's friend) for about an hour and a half. Every day the friend says she has so much homework and wants to work on it as soon as she walks in our house. My DD10 only has a 1/4 of the homework her friend has, for reasons I do not know, I am guessing because they give them time in class and my daughter is getting it done. So, my daugher proceeds to help her finish her homework.
Today, it is beautiful out so the same thing happens, Oh, I have so much homework, my DD10 says I just have to finish my math. I said, Why don't you do your homework later and go outside and play. The friend says, My mom says I have to get my homework done before she picks me up. ???
It is not that I don't mind my daughter helping the girl out from time to time, but every day? Is that really my daughter's responsibility? I told them No, no homework and sent them outside. I told them they can get it done later.
I hope the girl does not get into trouble, but geez........
I would have just sent my daughter out to play and respected the other girl's desire to get her homework done.
It sounds like the other girl has a great work ethic, getting her homework done right after school and forgoing play time. I am sure she would have preferred to go outside with your daughter, but I admire her for saying she needed to get her homework done first.
Unless this is a scheduled daily playdate for your daughter, I would have been extremely annoyed if my babysitter forbid my child to do their homework just to provide a playmate for your child. A good homework ethic is way more important than an afternoon outside, especially if there is planned family time for the evenings when she gets home.
As for why your daughter doesn't have homework, there could be many reasons for that. Some children are just slower and cannot finish all their homework in class.
If you don't want your daughter helping her everyday, and I agree she should not be helping her everyday, then redirect your daughter. But don't redirect the child you babysit when it goes against what she has been taught to do. A simple, "honey, Sally needs to her homework, let's give her some space" would be all that is needed to keep your daughter from helping.
Also, if the other girl is really using your daughter for her homework, by limiting your daughter's interaction with her during homework time, you will have nipped that in the bud. So, either way you win. By redirecting your daughter you either give the girl her space to finish her homework as her mother requested or if the girl is trying to use your daughter, you have put an end to that.
I think you need to ask yourself if you see this as a babysitting job or as a playdate for your daughter. Because if you see it as a playdate for your daughter, then you might need to find another child to babysit that does not have the stipulation that she needs to get her homework done first.
Also, I would see it as a red flag that a classmate had much more homework than my own daughter. I would be calling my daughter's teacher right away to make sure that she is getting all her homework done. 99% of the time it would be as you expected and that she was getting it done in class. But I would have to make sure it was getting done, especially if I had no idea what the daily homework situation was.