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Home-Improvement | Halting Homework Has ...Halting Homework HasslesSubmitted by Jody on Tuesday Sep 30, 2008 and viewed 196 timesTotal Word Count: 693 Author Rating: NA Rate this article
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Homework is a child’s responsibility, so we need to be careful how much we help. We want to be aware of what our children are doing and be involved in helpful ways, but not help too much. Avoid the word "we" — it implies that homework is our responsibility. Say, "When are you going to do your homework?" If they are having problems, figure out why.
Homework is a child’s responsibility, so we need to be careful how much we help. We want to be aware of what our children are doing and be involved in helpful ways, but not help too much. Avoid the word "we" — it implies that homework is our responsibility. Say, "When are you going to do your homework?" If they are having problems, figure out why. If children don’t understand homework, ask questions that help them
figure out the answer. "What are you supposed to do here? Where in the
book does it talk about this?" If children don’t understand the
information, we can try explaining it. We do not have to understand what
children are learning to be helpful. We just need to know the skills for
helping our children find their own answers. If children need daily
help, they may benefit from a tutor more than our taking responsibility for
helping them. It’s a delicate balance to be helpful, without fostering
dependency, rescuing, or helping too much. If children forget a book, lunch, or homework, teach organizational
skills and use problem solving to let children chose self-reminders. Avoid
being their reminder or rescuer. Agree to deliver forgotten items no more than
three times per year. After that, the child will need to experience the natural
consequence of not having the item. If children don’t see the value of homework, avoid lecturing. Ask
questions like, "Why do you think the teacher wants you to do homework?
How can doing homework help you? What will happen if you don’t do it?"
Offer one brief value statement like, "Sometimes people ask us to
do things they feel are important but we don’t. At work I have to do what my
boss asks me to do. School is your job and teachers are your boss. You need to
follow the schools rules, even if you don’t agree with them. As long as they
aren’t asking you to do something hurtful or wrong, you need to do what they
ask to do your job well." When children don’t do homework on purpose, it could be one of
four reasons: · Children might "act stupid" so
teachers (or parents) will pay attention and spend time helping
them. If the parent/teacher involves the child in meaningful activities or
spends other special time with the child, it can prevent or stop this behavior. · Children might want to prove that they have power,
by refusing to cooperate. "You can’t make me." They also might see if
they can get others to take over and do the work for them. After all, if others
will take responsibility why not let them? · Children might not do homework to
"punish" a disliked teacher. If good grades are important to parents
and children want to hurt them, getting poor grades can be revenge.
Help children find more appropriate ways to resolve the problem with the
parent/teacher. · Children may not do their homework because
they are so discouraged they have given up. Give encouragement,
not pressure, and help them break down assignments into smaller tasks to solve. Children who have given up on school are experiencing a deeper problem. Listen closely to identify the real issue. This is what needs to be resolved. Have children brainstorm possible solutions. You may enlist professional guidance, if indicated. The two key points to remember about halting homework hassles are (a) you need to identify and resolve the "real issue" that’s causing the problem and (b) do this in a way that teaches children how to solve their own problems. ArticleSource: ArticlesAlley.com
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