Op-Ed in Con­tra Costa Times, California

Today’s post is an op-ed pub­lished in the Con­tra Costa Times on Novem­ber 15. It’s writ­ten by Kerry Dick­in­son, who was Monday’s’s guest blogger.

Home­work is Cul­prit
by Kerry Dickinson

I was both thrilled and per­plexed with the front page arti­cle “Healthy devel­op­ment tied to nature” on Nov. 8. I’m thrilled because our fam­ily loves being out­doors and we know that nature is good for the mind, body and soul. I’m delighted that this arti­cle pro­motes rid­ing one’s bike or walk­ing to local schools and stores. That’s great for the envi­ron­ment as well as for one’s own health.

I am per­plexed, how­ever, that the writer men­tioned video games as one of the main rea­sons kids stay indoors. It’s true that after school activ­i­ties such as video games, sports, or music lessons do take up a con­sid­er­able amount of time, time that could be spent play­ing out­doors. But let’s not ignore the fact that chil­dren are spend­ing one to three hours on home­work after school each night and some­times more on the week­ends. Add home­work to after school activ­i­ties and it’s easy to see why chil­dren spend so lit­tle time outdoors.

As par­ents we have a choice about our children’s extracur­ric­u­lar activ­i­ties. But we DON’T have a choice about the home­work they are given. I would much rather send my boys out­side to play after school than nag them about doing their homework.

Imag­ine a time when you came home from school and the first ques­tion out of your mother’s mouth was “Who are you going to play with today?” instead of, “How much home­work do you have today?” Chances are, that time was 30 years ago when you were a kid.

2 Comments on “Op-Ed in Con­tra Costa Times, California”

  1. TooMuchHomework says:

    When­ever I hear how home­work takes from one to three hours, I’m left puz­zled. Hey, we’d kill for three hours! Try five, six, seven some nights. And then it’s still not fin­ished. I kid you not. It’s never three.

    When­ever an arti­cle decries the state of home­work, I am at once immensely grate­ful yet come away feel­ing it still doesn’t go far enough. Why are our lives a car­i­ca­ture of “worser than worse?”

    I’m tired. So please. No lec­tures on how we/she aren’t doing it right, it shouldn’t take this long, as if it was our fault. My child is excep­tion­ally gifted with ADD who learns best in depth, hyper-focus style. It takes her longer. Schools need to build in for vary­ing learn­ing styles, dif­fer­ences and disabilities.

    When I was a child, it didn’t take a psy­chol­o­gist, psy­chi­a­trist, ther­a­pist, tutor, med­ica­tion, home­work coach, yoga,stress relief and a national sup­port group just to get through home­work. So please don’t sug­gest all that help. Except for the national sup­port group!

    Home­work has spawned a lucra­tive indus­try of tutors and coaches and pro­fes­sion­als, all designed to essen­tially make the child do what we shouldn’t be ask­ing the child to do in the first place. There are times when your “defi­ant” child is sim­ply worn out, anx­ious and sleep deprived. They aren’t being oppo­si­tional, they are cry­ing for relief.

    Exces­sive home­work pro­po­nents may laud its pos­i­tive ben­e­fits. The only ben­e­fit I see is that the cur­ricu­lum gets covered…at home! A relief for the teacher, tor­ture for par­ent and child alike. I even­tu­ally home­schooled because, you guessed it, we were already home­school­ing. At the end of a long day.

    We don’t do the tutor/homework coach brigade. Here’s the joke. We don’t have time. If I dragged my daugh­ter to all that help, the time it would eat up, I am sure, would cause more stress than the orig­i­nal prob­lem net­ted in the first place!

    My daugh­ter has had an abid­ing pas­sion to learn, to study, to grow intel­lec­tu­ally. She is hardly a case of the smart slacker, on Face­book until ten o’clock. I can attest to the fact that her work­load is insur­mount­able and unrea­son­able. It is relent­less, every day and all week­end too. We finally said, go do an activ­ity, home­work or not. We hadn’t encour­aged it in the past because home­work eats up every minute and I am sad­dened by all my child missed out on.

    My daugh­ter is yes, smart but also dili­gent, con­sci­en­tious, seri­ous. She is per­fec­tion­ist, so yes, I admit, she could tighten it up, learn to be more effi­cient. But when did this become my job? If schools are so bent on send­ing all this work home, THEY need to be teach­ing effec­tive study skills, not me. I can’t afford to hire the help.

    December 12th, 2007 at 3:11 pm
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  2. DianeAdel says:

    Kerry — I agree whole­heart­edly with your sen­ti­ments. In fact, I emailed the “Chil­dren and Nature Net­work” (www​.cna​turenet​.org) and asked them to con­sider con­duct­ing a study to inves­ti­gate whether exces­sive home­work loads could be as seri­ous an imped­i­ment as com­put­ers etc to get­ting kids out­doors. Have not heard a response as yet :-) Maybe if many peo­ple asked the same ques­tion .… who knows? Just a thought ;-)

    An extra thought pro­voked by the post from “TooMuchHomework” — How come we, as par­ents, have no legal rights when it comes to decid­ing how much time our kids should spend doing school­work at home — or do we?

    December 14th, 2007 at 10:11 pm
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