A Blast from the Past

I love this edi­to­r­ial from 1910, posted in yesterday’s Cal­gary Her­ald. (Thanks to Vera Good­man, author of Sim­ply Too Much Home­work, for send­ing it to me.)

Hope For The Chil­dren
pub­lished in the Cal­gary Her­ald on Jan­u­ary 26, 1910 and reprinted on Feb­ru­ary 2010

The Her­ald has fre­quently urged the abo­li­tion of home work in the pub­lic schools, at least in the lower grades. It believes that lit­tle chil­dren of from seven to twelve years of age do not need to study at home in order to learn as much as their brains are prop­erly capa­ble of car­ry­ing dur­ing that period.

It is a plea­sure now to be able to quote one of the lead­ing author­i­ties in Canada in sup­port of this view. Inspec­tor Hughes of Toronto, whose name is known wher­ever edu­ca­tion is dis­cussed, will rec­om­mend to the board of edu­ca­tion of that city the abo­li­tion of home­work in all the classes below the senior third. His exam­ple will prob­a­bly be fol­lowed by other sim­i­lar offi­cials and may per­haps in time reach Calgary.

There is hope for the chil­dren in this news. Home study, as an east­ern paper recently put it, is the Jack-the-Giant-Killer of pri­mary edu­ca­tion. “It kills,” says the Toronto Star, “the giant in the mak­ing, catches the bright boy, who ought to become the big vir­ile man, and smoth­ers him under blan­kets of books. It stunts his intel­lect by mak­ing him work when he should be rest­ing. It puts his eyes out with night work, rounds his shoul­ders, leaves him a hol­low chest.”

The Her­ald can­not too strongly impress on the par­ents of Cal­gary the far greater impor­tance of healthy bod­ies to crammed minds. Calgary’s schools are well equipped with play grounds. Calgary’s chil­dren, as a rule, are a healthy lot. Calgary’s cli­mate is per­fectly adapted to the mould­ing of vig­or­ous bod­ies. We do not want them spoiled for the sake of a few lessons or a lit­tle more rapid advance in some branch of study. The exam­ple of Inspec­tor Hughes is a strong one. The pub­lic school board of this city might well con­sider it care­fully with a view to abol­ish­ing home study in the lower grades of the schools under their charge.

7 Comments on “A Blast from the Past”

  1. PsychMom says:

    That is the best “find” ever Sara!

    February 2nd, 2010 at 7:50 am
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  2. FedUpMom says:

    So a hun­dred years ago peo­ple under­stood that home­work over­load was bad for a child’s health. And here we are, a hun­dred years later, argu­ing the same point.

    I notice the arti­cle says home­work is bad for “chil­dren seven to twelve years old …” These days, kids get home­work from the age of five, or even younger. Ugh.

    February 2nd, 2010 at 8:33 am
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  3. HomeworkBlues says:

    Depress­ing that we have gone back­wards, not for­wards. And it’s not as if new research and ancec­do­tal find­ings sud­denly prove the merit of no play and more work for chil­dren. The ques­tion we keep ask­ing here is, what the hell are we doing to our young? Bears do a bet­ter job pro­tect­ing them.

    February 2nd, 2010 at 11:12 am
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  4. Mary Sullivan says:

    I loved read­ing this – so won­der­ful. But yes, what a bum­mer that 100 years on, we con­tinue to ignore com­mon sense and have, yes, made things worse by intro­duc­ing home­work for 5-year-olds. My 4 y.o. niece even told me this wkend that she gets HW, although I have to believe it must be “self assigned.” Almost afraid to ask her parents!

    February 2nd, 2010 at 3:19 pm
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  5. Vera Goodman` says:

    I am the author of the only book by a Cana­dian author deal­ing with this sub­ject. When I found this arti­cle, I didn’t look at the 100 years. I thought it was actu­ally hap­pen­ing! I was ecsta­tic. But I truly feel that the by keep­ing the issue in front of peo­ple we will affect change. I am a read­ing expert and have just pub­lished some inter­est­ing stuff around that so I haven’t been giv­ing my atten­tion to the home­work issue. I hope to blog more often now.
    Thanks, Sara, for keep­ing up this blog.

    February 3rd, 2010 at 8:44 pm
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  6. Mark Wallace says:

    I won­der when home­work did get started, and why. I think it’s safe to assume that it wasn’t before the Indus­trial Rev­o­lu­tion, because kids would have had to help their par­ents with chores on the farm. But when, and, more impor­tant, why? What’s the ear­li­est ref­er­ence to this prac­tice that any­one can find?

    February 25th, 2010 at 12:46 pm
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  7. PsychMom says:

    Because of the wax­ing and wan­ing of the prac­tice over time in the last 120 years, I’ll bet it will have lots of “origins”..

    …this home­work thing for very young chil­dren, though, (K to G5) is a rel­a­tively new invention..in the last 20– 25 years, I’d say. I didn’t learn to read in kinder­garten in the 60’s…colors, shapes, count­ing up to 10, learn­ing to say please and thank you, and going to the bath­room on your own were the only edu­ca­tional goals in Kinder­garten …and you only went to school for half the day.

    February 25th, 2010 at 1:49 pm
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