Helping your Child with Homework
Helping your Child with Homework
(For parents of elementary and Junior High School Children)
Contents
| Forward | 3 |
| Homework: A Concern for the Whole Family | 5 |
| The Basics | 6 |
| Show You Think Education and Homework Are Important | 8 |
| Monitor Assignments | 11 |
| Provide Guidance | 13 |
| Talk With Someone at School to Resolve Problems Resources | 18 |
| Checklists for Helping Your Child With Homework | 24 |
| The National Education Goals | 25 |
Foreword
Families play a vital role in educating America’s children. What families do is more important to student success than whether they are rich or poor, whether parents have finished high school or not, or whether children are in elementary, junior high, or high school.
Yet, for all that common sense and research tell us, family involvement often remains neglected in the debate about American school reform. To focus more attention on this important subject, the U.S. Congress recently added to an initial list of six National Education Goals another that states:
Every school will promote partnerships that will increase parental involvement and participation in promoting the social, emotional, and academic growth of children.
The Office of Educational Research and Improvement has produced Helping Your Child With Homework to contribute to the drive to increase family involvement in children’s learning. As the handbook points out we know that children who spend more time on homework, on average, do better in school, and that the academic benefits increase as children move into the upper grades.
But the value of homework extends beyond school. We know that good assignments, completed successfully, can help children develop wholesome habits and attitudes. Homework can help parents learn about their children’s education and communicate both with their children and the schools. And it can encourage a lifelong love of learning.
In addition to helping with homework, there are many other important ways that parents can help their children learn. Parents can encourage children to spend more leisure time reading than watching television. They can talk with their children and communicate positive behaviors, values, and character traits. They can keep in touch with the school. And they can express high expectations for children and encourage their efforts to achieve.
PURPOSE
We hope Helping Your Child With Homework can lead all of you facing the challenges of raising children one step closer to success. Indeed, family involvement in education is crucial if we want our children to succeed in school and throughout life. 26 pgs.
Order today and change your life forever!
Only
$7.95
