Homework in a Standards-Based Classroom
by Emily Rinkema and Stan Williams
by Emily Rinkema and Stan Williams
We have learned so
much about the brain in the past few decades, and it’s time to start applying
what we know to our teaching practices. We know that in order to maximize
learning, the brain needs:
- Clarity
- Time to consolidate new learning
- To feel safe
- To experience frequent success
- To work within the ZPD (Zone of Proximal Development)
Traditional homework practices often go against most of
these principles of learning. So…based on what we know about the brain and
learning, here are some dos and don’ts for homework in a standards-based class:
If you decide to assign homework, it should be:
- Clear and target-based: students should know exactly what they are doing and why they are doing it. The work should directly connect to the targets for your class.
- Differentiated: students should not all have the same work; base their assignments on their current needs, just as you would instruction and activities in class.
- Engaging: we want students to want to do work outside of class; this will prevent cheating and will improve work completion.
- Brief: students are busy. They often have 6-8 classes in addition to after school activities, family responsibilities, or work. Brains need time to consolidate—which means time to play and sleep.
- Graded: But not-graded does not mean optional; if you assign it, it should be important, which means you need to ensure that students complete it, even if that means taking time in class. Not graded also doesn’t mean not checked; we must give feedback on homework if we want students to value it (and feedback within 48 hours, if we want it to affect learning). Related note: no student should fail a class due to homework—it’s not an accurate enough measure of learning to base such an important decision upon.
- New Learning: when students are first learning a skill, we should be present to watch that learning and correct misunderstandings. If students practice a skill wrong, it is very difficult to undo the learning.
Resources for Further
Reading:
·
“Five Hallmarks of Good Homework” by Cathy Vatterott: http://www.ascd.org/publications/educational-leadership/sept10/vol68/num01/Five-Hallmarks-of-Good-Homework.aspx
·
“End Homework Now” by Etta Kralovec and John Buell: http://www.ascd.org/publications/educational-leadership/apr01/vol58/num07/End-Homework-Now.aspx
·
“Opinions about Homework: A collection of summaries of articles” by Kim
Marshall: http://www.greenwichschools.org/uploaded/district/pdfs/Homework_Committee_2012-2013/Homework_-_Kim_Marshall.pdf
Common Teacher Concerns and Brief (and opinionated) Responses
“If I don’t assign homework, we’ll never get through
all the content.”
If you’re relying on homework
to get through content, then you have too much content. Our job is to ensure
learning, not to cover material.
“But what about reading. Reading is different, right?”
Reading homework is tricky.
If it’s reading for fun, as in the student chose the reading and it’s at the
student’s level, then reading homework is beneficial. If the reading is
assigned, however, you need to ensure that the student can access it. That
means you need to know that it is within the student’s independent reading
level (which is usually different than their ability to understand within your
class), and that you know their reading rates (a chapter of a novel may take
some students 30 minutes, and others 2 hours—the latter is not a reasonable
request).
“If I don’t grade homework, students won’t do it.”
Not true. Students will do
work that is meaningful, clear, and that leads to success. There is a
significant difference between not grading and optional. You need to set the
expectation that the homework is a mandatory part of the learning cycle; and
when it isn’t finished or accurate, students will need to do it (even if that
means you rearrange your class time to get it done). Additionally, just because
you are not grading it, does not mean you aren’t collecting it—if you assign
it, you should look at it to ensure learning and catch misunderstandings. Just
stamping “done” or “not done” is not effective.
“I don’t have time to create differentiated,
target-based homework”
Then don’t assign homework.
The good news is that not having to assess homework will clear up time for you
to work more on differentiated, target-based classroom activities that will
lead to better, more efficient learning, which will mean you won’t need to
assign homework anyway!
“Homework teaches accountability, responsibility and
time management skills. If we don’t teach these now, we are doing students a
disservice. In college they will have tons of homework and it won’t be
differentiated, so we need to prepare them.”
There are a few ways to
respond to this. First, most traditional homework practices don’t teach these skills—they reward students
who already have them and punish those who don’t. It is much more effective to
actually teach these skills while you have students in front of you in class,
not when they are at home. Second, by helping students maximize their learning,
we are preparing them for future learning. We should not sacrifice good
teaching practices now in order to prepare students for bad teaching practices
later. In addition, in college, students most often have 2-3 hours of class per
day (max)—in high school, they have 5-7 hours. If we teach students how to work
independently and manage time (both of which can be done most effectively in class), then they will be prepared.
Brought to you by
@cvulearns (Emily Rinkema and Stan Williams, erinkema@cvuhs.org and swilliams@cvuhs.org)
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