SlideShare a Scribd company logo
HOMEWORKDOES IT INCREASE STUDENT
ACHIEVEMENT?
By: Carmen Serrano
Social Studies, JFK
Teacher
• FOR YEARS AMERICANS HAVE BEEN
CONCERNED ABOUT FALLING BEHIND
IN EDUCATION AND THEY MAY HAVE
BEEN CORRECT IN DOING SO.
• IN A RECENT REPORT BY
THE ANNIE E. CASEY
FOUNDATION, ONE OUT
OF THREE STUDENTS
SCORED "BELOW BASIC"
ON THE 2009 NATIONAL
ASSESSMENT OF
EDUCATION PROGRESS
(NAEP) READING TEST.
EVEN MORE ALARMING
IS THE FACT THAT MORE
THAN 67 PERCENT OF
ALL US FOURTH
GRADERS SCORED
"BELOW PROFICIENT,"
• AMERICAN STUDENTS RANKED 25TH IN
MATH, 17TH IN SCIENCE AND 14TH IN
READING.
• THE UNITED STATES PLACES 17TH IN THE
DEVELOPED WORLD FOR
EDUCATION, ACCORDING TO A GLOBAL REPORT BY
EDUCATION FIRM PEARSON (2007).
WHY HOMEWORK HAS BECOME
SO CONTROVERSIAL?
• SOVIET UNION LAUNCHED SPUTNIK CAUSED THE UNITED
STATES TO FOCUS ON EDUCATION, ESPECIALLY IN THE
AREAS OF SCIENCE AND MATH (NELSON 2007).
• A NATION AT RISK WAS PUBLISHED, AND IT CRITICIZED
UNITED STATES EDUCATION, CALLING IT MEDIOCRE (U.S.
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, 1983).
• NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND LEGISLATION WAS IMPLEMENTED
TO SECURE ALL CHILDREN’S EDUCATION (PL 107-110,
2001).
• HOMEWORK HAS BECOME A COMMON AND
WELL-KNOWN STUDENT DAILY ROUTINE
(COOPER, ROBINSON, & PATALL, 2006).
• DOES HOMEWORK REALLY HELP STUDENTS
INCREASE THEIR ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE?
• DO STUDIES SHOW A LINK BETWEEN HOMEWORK
AND STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT?
• THERE IS VERY LITTLE CORRELATION BETWEEN
HOMEWORK AND STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT
(COOPER, 2006).
• KOHN (2006) ARGUES THAT NONE OF THE
RESEARCH SHOWS A CONNECTION BETWEEN
HOMEWORK AND INDEPENDENT THINKING.
(KOHN, 2006).
• SO WHY DO TEACHERS CONTINUE TO
GIVE HOMEWORK?
PURPOSE OF THE STUDY
• COLLECTING HOMEWORK BECAME FRUSTRATING!!!!
• IS HOMEWORK A MAJOR COMPONENT OF STUDENT
ACHIEVEMENT?
• AM I FAILING TO PROMOTE HIGH ACADEMIC STANDARDS BY
NOT GIVING HOMEWORK?
• WILL ASSIGNING HOMEWORK HELP THEM UNDERSTAND THE
CONCEPT BETTER?
• IS MY IMPLEMENTATION OF HOMEWORK CORRECT? AM I
ASSIGNING THE RIGHT WORK?
• DOES HOMEWORK HELP INCREASE THEIR CRITICAL
THINKING SKILL?
• THE PURPOSE OF THIS ACTION RESEARCH PROJECT IS
TO IMPROVE MY EDUCATIONAL PRACTICES AND
DETERMINE IF USING HOMEWORK BENEFITS STUDENT
LEARNING.
• TO DETERMINE IF ASSESSMENT RESULTS ARE
SIGNIFICANTLY DIFFERENT AMONG STUDENTS WHO
WERE GIVEN HOMEWORK AND STUDENTS WHO WERE
NOT GIVEN HOMEWORK.
• THE POTENTIAL OF LEADING TO PROFESSIONAL
DEVELOPMENT OPPORTUNITIES ON HOMEWORK
IMPLEMENTATION.
RESEARCH QUESTION
• 1. WHAT ARE THE STUDENTS' PERCEPTIONS CONCERNING
HOMEWORK?
• 2. HOW DOES HOMEWORK IMPACT STUDENT
ACHIEVEMENT?
SIGNIFICANCE
• THE IMPORTANCE OF THIS STUDY IS TO GAIN INSIGHT AS
TO WHETHER HOMEWORK ACTUALLY HELPS INCREASE
STUDENT LEARNING.
• HOMEWORK CONTRIBUTES TO THE CORPORATE STYLE
AND COMPETITIVE CULTURE IN THE UNITED STATES
(KRALOVEC AND BUELL, 2000)
WHAT IS THE PURPOSE OF
HOMEWORK?
• BUTLER (1987) STATES THAT HOMEWORK SHOULD BE
ACTIVITIES THAT REINFORCE LEARNING, PROVIDE PRACTICE,
AND ALLOW STUDENTS TO APPLY NEW LEARNED SKILLS.
• COOPER (2007) DEFINES HOMEWORK AS "TASKS ASSIGNED
TO STUDENTS BY SCHOOL TEACHERS THAT ARE INTENDED
TO BE CARRIED OUT DURING NON-SCHOOL HOURS” (P. 4).
• HOMEWORK SHOULD BE FUN, AND RELATED TO LIFE SKILLS
(KOHN, 2006)
• HOMEWORK HELPS STUDENTS DEVELOP SELF-DISCIPLINE,
RESPONSIBILITY, AND GOOD HABITS AND ATTITUDES (PAULU,
1995).
PERCEPTION OF HOMEWORK
• MORE THAN 80% OF TEACHERS
AND 77% OF STUDENTS AFFIRMED
THAT HOMEWORK IS VERY
IMPORTANT TO THEM;
APPROXIMATELY 90% OF
TEACHERS AND PARENTS AND 69%
OF STUDENTS BELIEVED THAT
HOMEWORK HELPED STUDENTS
LEARN MORE IN SCHOOL (MARKOW,
KIM, AND LIEBMAN 2007)
• ONLY 10% OF PARENTS BELIEVED
THAT THEIR CHILDREN HAD TOO
MUCH, WHILE 25% BELIEVED THEY
HAD TOO LITTLE, AND 64% OF
PARENTS BELIEVED THEIR
CHILDREN HAD ABOUT THE RIGHT
AMOUNT OF HOMEWORK (GILL &
LITERATURE REVIEW
ADVANTAGE OF HOMEWORK
• HOMEWORK INCREASES LEARNING
AND, THEREFORE, SHOULD BE
CONTINUED AND MODIFIED FOR
IMPROVEMENT WHEN NECESSARY
(MARZANO & PICKERING, 2007).
•
• HOMEWORK ENHANCES CLASSROOM
INSTRUCTION, CONNECTS FUTURE
LESSONS, BOOSTS FAMILY
RELATIONSHIPS, AND ADDS TO THE
STUDENT’S INTEREST IN LEARNING
(ALLEMAN, 2010).
ADVANTAGE OF HOMEWORK
• STUDENTS REMEMBER ONLY 50% OF THE INFORMATION. THUS,
HOMEWORK WILL REINFORCE OR HELP STUDENTS APPLY THAT
INFORMATION (KURUTS, 2006).
• THERE IS A POSITIVE CORRELATION BETWEEN THE AMOUNT OF
HOMEWORK GIVEN AND STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT. (BEMPECHAT,
2004)
• SINCE 1962, OUT OF 20 STUDIES DONE, 14 ARE PRO-HOMEWORK ;
OUT OF 50 STUDIES, 43 SHOWED STUDENTS WHO DID THEIR
HOMEWORK IMPROVED IN THEIR ACHIEVEMENT (COOPER, 2000).
• ALSO NOTED THAT STUDENTS WHO DO HOMEWORK WILL
OUTPERFORM STUDENTS WHO DO NOT DO HOMEWORK BY 69%
ON A STANDARDIZED TEST. COOPER (2000)
• ALSO SHOWS THAT THE POSITIVE CORRELATION IS MUCH
STRONGER FOR SECONDARY STUDENTS THAN ELEMENTARY
STUDENTS (COOPER, 2006)
• HOMEWORK COMPLETION SIGNIFICANTLY INFLUENCES
STUDENT’S SELF-REGULATORY BEHAVIOR AND
MOTIVATIONAL BELIEFS, AND THAT HOMEWORK
IMPROVES STUDENTS’ SELF-EFFICACY AND INSTILLS
RESPONSIBILITY TOWARDS THEIR ACADEMIC
ACHIEVEMENT (BEMBENUTTY, 2009)
• HOMEWORK FOSTERS SELF-REGULATION SKILLS, IT
ALLOWS STUDENTS TO PRACTICE BEHAVIOR SUCH AS
PLANNING, ORGANIZATION, OVERCOMING OBSTACLES,
PERSISTENCE AND STAYING ON TASK (XU, M., BENSON,
S.N.K., MUDREY-CAMINO, R., & STEINER, R. P., 2010)
• DUKE UNIVERSITY RESEARCHERS HAVE REVIEWED MORE
THAN 60 RESEARCH STUDIES ON HOMEWORK BETWEEN
1987 AND 2003 AND CONCLUDED THAT HOMEWORK DOES
HAVE A POSITIVE EFFECT ON STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT.
• DURHAM, N.C. 2013, DUKE UNIVERSITY
LITERATURE REVIEW
DISADVANTAGE OF HOMEWORK
• RECENTLY, HOMEWORK HAS BECOME “A
SOURCE OF COMPLAINT AND FRICTION
BETWEEN HOME AND SCHOOL MORE
OFTEN THAN OTHER TEACHING
ACTIVITIES” (COOPER, 2001 P. IX).
• TEACHERS LACK THE SKILLS TO DESIGN
HOMEWORK THAT ACTUALLY BENEFITS
THE STUDENT’S LEARNING (COOPER,
2007).
• REVIEW OF 60 STUDIES NOTED THAT
TOO MUCH HOMEWORK MAY REDUCE
THE EFFECT OF HOMEWORK OR MAY
EVEN BECOME A HINDRANCE TO
STUDENT LEARNING (COOPER, 2007)
LITERATURE REVIEW
DISADVANTAGE OF HOMEWORK
• IF THERE IS A CORRELATION BETWEEN
HOMEWORK AND ACHIEVEMENT, IT IS NOT
SUFFICIENT ENOUGH TO JUSTIFY THAT
CONCLUSION AND THAT SEVERAL FACTORS
SURROUNDING HOMEWORK AND
ACHIEVEMENT NEED TO BE CONSIDERED
(KOHN, 2006)
• HOMEWORK SEEMS TO BE TAKING OVER SOME
OF THE TIME MEANT TO BE FOR
SOCIALIZATION. (KOHN, 2006).
• FOUND CONTRADICTING RESEARCH
STUDIES—THAT SHOWED HOMEWORK DOES
BENEFIT LEARNING WHILE OTHER
RESEARCHERS ARGUED THAT IT DOES NOT
DISADVANTAGE OF HOMEWORK
• 4 OUT OF 10 PARENTS POLLED BELIEVED THAT
MOST OF THE HOMEWORK GIVEN WAS MERELY
BUSYWORK (PAUL, 2011)
• TOO MUCH HOMEWORK CAN BE HARMFUL TO A
CHILD’S HEALTH AND FAMILY TIME (BENNET &
KALISH 2006, P. 53).
• CAUTIONED TEACHERS NOT TO GIVE TOO MUCH
HOMEWORK BECAUSE THIS MAY DIMINISH ITS’
EFFECTIVENESS OR EVEN BECOME
COUNTERPRODUCTIVE (COOPER, ROBINSON, AND
PATALL, (2006)
• HOMEWORK SHOULD NOT BE GIVEN TOO OFTEN,
BUT WHEN IT IS GIVEN, THEN IT SHOULD BE
REALISTIC IN LENGTH AND THE DIFFICULTY
SHOULD BE BASED ON STUDENTS’ SKILL LEVEL.(
GOOD AND BROPHY ,2003)
• CLAIM THAT HOMEWORK CAN BE HARMFUL TO STUDENT’S
WELL-BEING WHEN TEACHERS ARE NOT TRAINED IN HOW
TO ASSIGN HOMEWORK. THE AUTHORS RECOMMEND
REDUCING THE AMOUNT OF HOMEWORK GIVEN,
DESIGNING MORE VALUABLE ASSIGNMENTS, AND
AVOIDING GIVING HOMEWORK DURING HOLIDAYS OR
BREAKS (BENNET AND KALISH, 2006)
• HOMEWORK IS “FORCED LABOR.” TEACHERS SHOULD BE
ABLE TO DO EVERYTHING INSIDE THE CLASSROOM
(SCHNURMACHER, 2012).
• PRINCIPAL BANNED HOMEWORK IN HIS SCHOOL AND
NOTED THAT EXCELLENT TEACHING DOES NOT REQUIRED
HOURS OF HOMEWORK (NELSON, 2007).
• REPORTED THAT ONE QUARTER OF STUDENTS FINISH
HOMEWORK ONLY SOMETIMES, RARELY, OR NEVER
(MARKOW ET AL. (2007)
• CONDUCTED A STUDY ON ALTERNATIVE HIGH SCHOOLS
AND WERE AMAZED TO DISCOVER THAT HOMEWORK WAS
ONE OF THE CONTRIBUTING FACTORS THAT CAUSED
STUDENTS TO DROP OUT OF SCHOOL. (KRALOVEC AND
BUELL’S, 2000)
• SUGGEST THAT POLICYMAKERS SHOULD LOOK INTO THE
QUALITY OF HOMEWORK BEING ASSIGNED IN ORDER TO
MAKE HOMEWORK PRACTICES EFFECTIVE (BAKER AND LE
TENDRE, 2005)
• COOPER ET. AL., (2006) NOTE THAT SINCE HOMEWORK
HAS BOTH POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE CONSEQUENCES, A
NEED FOR CONTINUED RESEARCH IS NECESSARY.
METHODOLOGY• RESEARCH SETTING
• THIS STUDY WILL TAKE PLACE AT A PUBLIC HIGH SCHOOL IN SCHOOL
YEAR 2013-2014.
• THE SCHOOL USES A BLOCK SCHEDULE FORMAT WITH ALTERNATING
PERIODS EACH DAY. STUDENTS TAKE THREE 100-MINUTES CLASSES PER
DAY.
• THE PARTICIPANTS OF THIS STUDY WILL BE STUDENTS IN MY U. S.
HISTORY CLASS (N=130).
• THE CLASSES CHOSEN FOR THE STUDY WILL BE CALLED CLASS A AND
CLASS B. CLASS A WILL BE PERIOD 1 AND 3, WHILE CLASS B WILL BE
PERIOD 2, 4, AND 6. CLASS A WILL BE NOT BE GIVEN HOMEWORK AND
CLASS B WILL BE GIVEN HOMEWORK.
• CONSENT FORMS WILL BE DISTRIBUTED FOR STUDENTS AND PARENTS
TO SIGN. THE STUDENTS WHO RETURN THE CONSENT FORMED WITH
SIGNATURES WILL PARTICIPATE IN THE STUDY.
• INTERVENTION
• DAY’S LESSONS USING LECTURES AND POWER POINT
PRESENTATIONS
• GROUP B WILL RECEIVE HOMEWORK
• ALL GROUPS WILL RECEIVE QUIZZES
• DATA COLLECTION
• I WILL USE MY GRADE BOOK AS ONE FORM OF COLLECTING
MY DATA.
• I WILL SURVEY STUDENTS AT THE END OF THE PROJECT
THANK YOU!
Homework defense
• COOPER POINTED OUT THAT THERE ARE LIMITATIONS TO
CURRENT RESEARCH ON HOMEWORK. FOR INSTANCE,
LITTLE RESEARCH HAS BEEN DONE TO ASSESS WHETHER
A STUDENT'S RACE, SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS OR ABILITY
LEVEL AFFECTS THE IMPORTANCE OF HOMEWORK IN HIS
OR HER ACHIEVEMENT.
• HOMEWORK 'BRIDGES THE GAP BETWEEN LEARNING AT
SCHOOL AND LEARNING AT HOME' AND SHOULD THEREFORE
BE CONSISTENT WITH AND CONNECTED TO THE LEARNING
EXPERIENCES BEING PROVIDED IN THE CLASSROOM. AS
WELL AS EMPHASIZING CURRICULUM RELEVANCE, SCHOOL
HOMEWORK POLICIES SHOULD ENSURE THAT HOMEWORK
• IS APPROPRIATE FOR EACH STUDENT'S AGE AND ABILITY
• TAKES INTO ACCOUNT STUDENTS' OTHER COMMITMENTS,
SUCH AS SPORT, PART-TIME EMPLOYMENT AND HOME
RESPONSIBILITIES
• TAKES INTO ACCOUNT TECHNOLOGY SUCH AS EMAIL AND
THE INTERNET SO THAT STUDENTS WITHOUT ACCESS ARE
NOT DISADVANTAGED.

More Related Content

PPT
Of Comic Strips and Wisdom
PPT
Homework in K-12 Education
PPTX
Homework powerpoint
PPTX
Too much of homework has negative effects…
PPTX
Benefit of Homework
PDF
Don't Waste My Time
PPT
Homework
PPT
Homework2010
Of Comic Strips and Wisdom
Homework in K-12 Education
Homework powerpoint
Too much of homework has negative effects…
Benefit of Homework
Don't Waste My Time
Homework
Homework2010

Similar to Homework defense (20)

PPTX
Homework defense
PPTX
Chapter 1 learning from the natural teachers
PPTX
testconstruction-edited.pptx
DOC
Nourse ch 1 and 2 after revisions
PPTX
Research and Distance Education
PPTX
College and Career Readiness Culture
PPTX
Differentiating instruction
PPTX
Literate Environment
PPTX
S ten ppt fc_11_15_2012
PPTX
To Flip? Or Not To Flip? Or Something In Between?
PPTX
Research Med homework (1).Power point presentation
PPTX
Purpose of Research W2023- purpose of researching
PPTX
ANIMAL PRODUCTION GRADE 12 RESEARCH TITLE
PPTX
Using & Adapting Authentic Materials To Help Motivate Students 2021
PPTX
Pec 10sddsdwwqswqdwqdsadsasdsdsdsdssdd3.pptx
PPTX
Faculty-Student Rapport in Teaching in Higher Education
PPTX
Sweden keynote 2012
PPTX
Differential Learning_Instruction _Slide Share.pptx
PPT
Middle Years Programming at Don Ross
PPTX
Grammar Presentation
Homework defense
Chapter 1 learning from the natural teachers
testconstruction-edited.pptx
Nourse ch 1 and 2 after revisions
Research and Distance Education
College and Career Readiness Culture
Differentiating instruction
Literate Environment
S ten ppt fc_11_15_2012
To Flip? Or Not To Flip? Or Something In Between?
Research Med homework (1).Power point presentation
Purpose of Research W2023- purpose of researching
ANIMAL PRODUCTION GRADE 12 RESEARCH TITLE
Using & Adapting Authentic Materials To Help Motivate Students 2021
Pec 10sddsdwwqswqdwqdsadsasdsdsdsdssdd3.pptx
Faculty-Student Rapport in Teaching in Higher Education
Sweden keynote 2012
Differential Learning_Instruction _Slide Share.pptx
Middle Years Programming at Don Ross
Grammar Presentation
Ad

More from servingdlord (20)

PPT
Us ch14 sec3 BIg Business
PPT
Us ch 14 Invention
PPT
The underground railroad
PPT
US CH 34 Bush_ Clinton 2019
PPT
US CH 33 Reagan 2019
PPT
US CH 32 Carter 2019
PPTX
WH WWII Europe
PPTX
WH WWII Dictators
PPT
US CH 31 Nixon 2019
PPT
US_CH 30 Vietnam War 2019
PPTX
WH WWII worksheet
PPTX
WH CH 29 WWI The Great War
PPTX
WH CH 22 Scientific Revolution
PPTX
WH Minoans
PPTX
WH CH 27 Imperialism
PPTX
WH CH 23 French Revolution
PPTX
WH CH 22 Enlightenment
PPTX
WH CH17 Renaissance
PPTX
WH CH14 Hundred Years War
PPTX
WH CH 6 Roman Empire
Us ch14 sec3 BIg Business
Us ch 14 Invention
The underground railroad
US CH 34 Bush_ Clinton 2019
US CH 33 Reagan 2019
US CH 32 Carter 2019
WH WWII Europe
WH WWII Dictators
US CH 31 Nixon 2019
US_CH 30 Vietnam War 2019
WH WWII worksheet
WH CH 29 WWI The Great War
WH CH 22 Scientific Revolution
WH Minoans
WH CH 27 Imperialism
WH CH 23 French Revolution
WH CH 22 Enlightenment
WH CH17 Renaissance
WH CH14 Hundred Years War
WH CH 6 Roman Empire
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
FourierSeries-QuestionsWithAnswers(Part-A).pdf
PPTX
Cell Types and Its function , kingdom of life
PDF
Abdominal Access Techniques with Prof. Dr. R K Mishra
PPTX
PPH.pptx obstetrics and gynecology in nursing
PDF
RMMM.pdf make it easy to upload and study
PPTX
Institutional Correction lecture only . . .
PDF
Basic Mud Logging Guide for educational purpose
PPTX
Microbial diseases, their pathogenesis and prophylaxis
PDF
O7-L3 Supply Chain Operations - ICLT Program
PDF
Microbial disease of the cardiovascular and lymphatic systems
PPTX
Week 4 Term 3 Study Techniques revisited.pptx
PDF
ANTIBIOTICS.pptx.pdf………………… xxxxxxxxxxxxx
PPTX
IMMUNITY IMMUNITY refers to protection against infection, and the immune syst...
PPTX
master seminar digital applications in india
PDF
VCE English Exam - Section C Student Revision Booklet
PPTX
Renaissance Architecture: A Journey from Faith to Humanism
PPTX
Pharmacology of Heart Failure /Pharmacotherapy of CHF
PPTX
Introduction to Child Health Nursing – Unit I | Child Health Nursing I | B.Sc...
PDF
Complications of Minimal Access Surgery at WLH
PPTX
The Healthy Child – Unit II | Child Health Nursing I | B.Sc Nursing 5th Semester
FourierSeries-QuestionsWithAnswers(Part-A).pdf
Cell Types and Its function , kingdom of life
Abdominal Access Techniques with Prof. Dr. R K Mishra
PPH.pptx obstetrics and gynecology in nursing
RMMM.pdf make it easy to upload and study
Institutional Correction lecture only . . .
Basic Mud Logging Guide for educational purpose
Microbial diseases, their pathogenesis and prophylaxis
O7-L3 Supply Chain Operations - ICLT Program
Microbial disease of the cardiovascular and lymphatic systems
Week 4 Term 3 Study Techniques revisited.pptx
ANTIBIOTICS.pptx.pdf………………… xxxxxxxxxxxxx
IMMUNITY IMMUNITY refers to protection against infection, and the immune syst...
master seminar digital applications in india
VCE English Exam - Section C Student Revision Booklet
Renaissance Architecture: A Journey from Faith to Humanism
Pharmacology of Heart Failure /Pharmacotherapy of CHF
Introduction to Child Health Nursing – Unit I | Child Health Nursing I | B.Sc...
Complications of Minimal Access Surgery at WLH
The Healthy Child – Unit II | Child Health Nursing I | B.Sc Nursing 5th Semester

Homework defense

  • 1. HOMEWORKDOES IT INCREASE STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT? By: Carmen Serrano Social Studies, JFK Teacher
  • 2. • FOR YEARS AMERICANS HAVE BEEN CONCERNED ABOUT FALLING BEHIND IN EDUCATION AND THEY MAY HAVE BEEN CORRECT IN DOING SO.
  • 3. • IN A RECENT REPORT BY THE ANNIE E. CASEY FOUNDATION, ONE OUT OF THREE STUDENTS SCORED "BELOW BASIC" ON THE 2009 NATIONAL ASSESSMENT OF EDUCATION PROGRESS (NAEP) READING TEST. EVEN MORE ALARMING IS THE FACT THAT MORE THAN 67 PERCENT OF ALL US FOURTH GRADERS SCORED "BELOW PROFICIENT,"
  • 4. • AMERICAN STUDENTS RANKED 25TH IN MATH, 17TH IN SCIENCE AND 14TH IN READING. • THE UNITED STATES PLACES 17TH IN THE DEVELOPED WORLD FOR EDUCATION, ACCORDING TO A GLOBAL REPORT BY EDUCATION FIRM PEARSON (2007).
  • 5. WHY HOMEWORK HAS BECOME SO CONTROVERSIAL? • SOVIET UNION LAUNCHED SPUTNIK CAUSED THE UNITED STATES TO FOCUS ON EDUCATION, ESPECIALLY IN THE AREAS OF SCIENCE AND MATH (NELSON 2007). • A NATION AT RISK WAS PUBLISHED, AND IT CRITICIZED UNITED STATES EDUCATION, CALLING IT MEDIOCRE (U.S. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, 1983). • NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND LEGISLATION WAS IMPLEMENTED TO SECURE ALL CHILDREN’S EDUCATION (PL 107-110, 2001).
  • 6. • HOMEWORK HAS BECOME A COMMON AND WELL-KNOWN STUDENT DAILY ROUTINE (COOPER, ROBINSON, & PATALL, 2006).
  • 7. • DOES HOMEWORK REALLY HELP STUDENTS INCREASE THEIR ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE? • DO STUDIES SHOW A LINK BETWEEN HOMEWORK AND STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT? • THERE IS VERY LITTLE CORRELATION BETWEEN HOMEWORK AND STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT (COOPER, 2006). • KOHN (2006) ARGUES THAT NONE OF THE RESEARCH SHOWS A CONNECTION BETWEEN HOMEWORK AND INDEPENDENT THINKING. (KOHN, 2006).
  • 8. • SO WHY DO TEACHERS CONTINUE TO GIVE HOMEWORK?
  • 9. PURPOSE OF THE STUDY • COLLECTING HOMEWORK BECAME FRUSTRATING!!!! • IS HOMEWORK A MAJOR COMPONENT OF STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT? • AM I FAILING TO PROMOTE HIGH ACADEMIC STANDARDS BY NOT GIVING HOMEWORK? • WILL ASSIGNING HOMEWORK HELP THEM UNDERSTAND THE CONCEPT BETTER? • IS MY IMPLEMENTATION OF HOMEWORK CORRECT? AM I ASSIGNING THE RIGHT WORK? • DOES HOMEWORK HELP INCREASE THEIR CRITICAL THINKING SKILL?
  • 10. • THE PURPOSE OF THIS ACTION RESEARCH PROJECT IS TO IMPROVE MY EDUCATIONAL PRACTICES AND DETERMINE IF USING HOMEWORK BENEFITS STUDENT LEARNING. • TO DETERMINE IF ASSESSMENT RESULTS ARE SIGNIFICANTLY DIFFERENT AMONG STUDENTS WHO WERE GIVEN HOMEWORK AND STUDENTS WHO WERE NOT GIVEN HOMEWORK. • THE POTENTIAL OF LEADING TO PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT OPPORTUNITIES ON HOMEWORK IMPLEMENTATION.
  • 11. RESEARCH QUESTION • 1. WHAT ARE THE STUDENTS' PERCEPTIONS CONCERNING HOMEWORK? • 2. HOW DOES HOMEWORK IMPACT STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT?
  • 12. SIGNIFICANCE • THE IMPORTANCE OF THIS STUDY IS TO GAIN INSIGHT AS TO WHETHER HOMEWORK ACTUALLY HELPS INCREASE STUDENT LEARNING. • HOMEWORK CONTRIBUTES TO THE CORPORATE STYLE AND COMPETITIVE CULTURE IN THE UNITED STATES (KRALOVEC AND BUELL, 2000)
  • 13. WHAT IS THE PURPOSE OF HOMEWORK? • BUTLER (1987) STATES THAT HOMEWORK SHOULD BE ACTIVITIES THAT REINFORCE LEARNING, PROVIDE PRACTICE, AND ALLOW STUDENTS TO APPLY NEW LEARNED SKILLS. • COOPER (2007) DEFINES HOMEWORK AS "TASKS ASSIGNED TO STUDENTS BY SCHOOL TEACHERS THAT ARE INTENDED TO BE CARRIED OUT DURING NON-SCHOOL HOURS” (P. 4). • HOMEWORK SHOULD BE FUN, AND RELATED TO LIFE SKILLS (KOHN, 2006) • HOMEWORK HELPS STUDENTS DEVELOP SELF-DISCIPLINE, RESPONSIBILITY, AND GOOD HABITS AND ATTITUDES (PAULU, 1995).
  • 14. PERCEPTION OF HOMEWORK • MORE THAN 80% OF TEACHERS AND 77% OF STUDENTS AFFIRMED THAT HOMEWORK IS VERY IMPORTANT TO THEM; APPROXIMATELY 90% OF TEACHERS AND PARENTS AND 69% OF STUDENTS BELIEVED THAT HOMEWORK HELPED STUDENTS LEARN MORE IN SCHOOL (MARKOW, KIM, AND LIEBMAN 2007) • ONLY 10% OF PARENTS BELIEVED THAT THEIR CHILDREN HAD TOO MUCH, WHILE 25% BELIEVED THEY HAD TOO LITTLE, AND 64% OF PARENTS BELIEVED THEIR CHILDREN HAD ABOUT THE RIGHT AMOUNT OF HOMEWORK (GILL &
  • 15. LITERATURE REVIEW ADVANTAGE OF HOMEWORK • HOMEWORK INCREASES LEARNING AND, THEREFORE, SHOULD BE CONTINUED AND MODIFIED FOR IMPROVEMENT WHEN NECESSARY (MARZANO & PICKERING, 2007). • • HOMEWORK ENHANCES CLASSROOM INSTRUCTION, CONNECTS FUTURE LESSONS, BOOSTS FAMILY RELATIONSHIPS, AND ADDS TO THE STUDENT’S INTEREST IN LEARNING (ALLEMAN, 2010).
  • 16. ADVANTAGE OF HOMEWORK • STUDENTS REMEMBER ONLY 50% OF THE INFORMATION. THUS, HOMEWORK WILL REINFORCE OR HELP STUDENTS APPLY THAT INFORMATION (KURUTS, 2006). • THERE IS A POSITIVE CORRELATION BETWEEN THE AMOUNT OF HOMEWORK GIVEN AND STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT. (BEMPECHAT, 2004) • SINCE 1962, OUT OF 20 STUDIES DONE, 14 ARE PRO-HOMEWORK ; OUT OF 50 STUDIES, 43 SHOWED STUDENTS WHO DID THEIR HOMEWORK IMPROVED IN THEIR ACHIEVEMENT (COOPER, 2000). • ALSO NOTED THAT STUDENTS WHO DO HOMEWORK WILL OUTPERFORM STUDENTS WHO DO NOT DO HOMEWORK BY 69% ON A STANDARDIZED TEST. COOPER (2000) • ALSO SHOWS THAT THE POSITIVE CORRELATION IS MUCH STRONGER FOR SECONDARY STUDENTS THAN ELEMENTARY STUDENTS (COOPER, 2006)
  • 17. • HOMEWORK COMPLETION SIGNIFICANTLY INFLUENCES STUDENT’S SELF-REGULATORY BEHAVIOR AND MOTIVATIONAL BELIEFS, AND THAT HOMEWORK IMPROVES STUDENTS’ SELF-EFFICACY AND INSTILLS RESPONSIBILITY TOWARDS THEIR ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT (BEMBENUTTY, 2009) • HOMEWORK FOSTERS SELF-REGULATION SKILLS, IT ALLOWS STUDENTS TO PRACTICE BEHAVIOR SUCH AS PLANNING, ORGANIZATION, OVERCOMING OBSTACLES, PERSISTENCE AND STAYING ON TASK (XU, M., BENSON, S.N.K., MUDREY-CAMINO, R., & STEINER, R. P., 2010)
  • 18. • DUKE UNIVERSITY RESEARCHERS HAVE REVIEWED MORE THAN 60 RESEARCH STUDIES ON HOMEWORK BETWEEN 1987 AND 2003 AND CONCLUDED THAT HOMEWORK DOES HAVE A POSITIVE EFFECT ON STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT. • DURHAM, N.C. 2013, DUKE UNIVERSITY
  • 19. LITERATURE REVIEW DISADVANTAGE OF HOMEWORK • RECENTLY, HOMEWORK HAS BECOME “A SOURCE OF COMPLAINT AND FRICTION BETWEEN HOME AND SCHOOL MORE OFTEN THAN OTHER TEACHING ACTIVITIES” (COOPER, 2001 P. IX). • TEACHERS LACK THE SKILLS TO DESIGN HOMEWORK THAT ACTUALLY BENEFITS THE STUDENT’S LEARNING (COOPER, 2007). • REVIEW OF 60 STUDIES NOTED THAT TOO MUCH HOMEWORK MAY REDUCE THE EFFECT OF HOMEWORK OR MAY EVEN BECOME A HINDRANCE TO STUDENT LEARNING (COOPER, 2007)
  • 20. LITERATURE REVIEW DISADVANTAGE OF HOMEWORK • IF THERE IS A CORRELATION BETWEEN HOMEWORK AND ACHIEVEMENT, IT IS NOT SUFFICIENT ENOUGH TO JUSTIFY THAT CONCLUSION AND THAT SEVERAL FACTORS SURROUNDING HOMEWORK AND ACHIEVEMENT NEED TO BE CONSIDERED (KOHN, 2006) • HOMEWORK SEEMS TO BE TAKING OVER SOME OF THE TIME MEANT TO BE FOR SOCIALIZATION. (KOHN, 2006). • FOUND CONTRADICTING RESEARCH STUDIES—THAT SHOWED HOMEWORK DOES BENEFIT LEARNING WHILE OTHER RESEARCHERS ARGUED THAT IT DOES NOT
  • 21. DISADVANTAGE OF HOMEWORK • 4 OUT OF 10 PARENTS POLLED BELIEVED THAT MOST OF THE HOMEWORK GIVEN WAS MERELY BUSYWORK (PAUL, 2011) • TOO MUCH HOMEWORK CAN BE HARMFUL TO A CHILD’S HEALTH AND FAMILY TIME (BENNET & KALISH 2006, P. 53). • CAUTIONED TEACHERS NOT TO GIVE TOO MUCH HOMEWORK BECAUSE THIS MAY DIMINISH ITS’ EFFECTIVENESS OR EVEN BECOME COUNTERPRODUCTIVE (COOPER, ROBINSON, AND PATALL, (2006) • HOMEWORK SHOULD NOT BE GIVEN TOO OFTEN, BUT WHEN IT IS GIVEN, THEN IT SHOULD BE REALISTIC IN LENGTH AND THE DIFFICULTY SHOULD BE BASED ON STUDENTS’ SKILL LEVEL.( GOOD AND BROPHY ,2003)
  • 22. • CLAIM THAT HOMEWORK CAN BE HARMFUL TO STUDENT’S WELL-BEING WHEN TEACHERS ARE NOT TRAINED IN HOW TO ASSIGN HOMEWORK. THE AUTHORS RECOMMEND REDUCING THE AMOUNT OF HOMEWORK GIVEN, DESIGNING MORE VALUABLE ASSIGNMENTS, AND AVOIDING GIVING HOMEWORK DURING HOLIDAYS OR BREAKS (BENNET AND KALISH, 2006)
  • 23. • HOMEWORK IS “FORCED LABOR.” TEACHERS SHOULD BE ABLE TO DO EVERYTHING INSIDE THE CLASSROOM (SCHNURMACHER, 2012). • PRINCIPAL BANNED HOMEWORK IN HIS SCHOOL AND NOTED THAT EXCELLENT TEACHING DOES NOT REQUIRED HOURS OF HOMEWORK (NELSON, 2007).
  • 24. • REPORTED THAT ONE QUARTER OF STUDENTS FINISH HOMEWORK ONLY SOMETIMES, RARELY, OR NEVER (MARKOW ET AL. (2007)
  • 25. • CONDUCTED A STUDY ON ALTERNATIVE HIGH SCHOOLS AND WERE AMAZED TO DISCOVER THAT HOMEWORK WAS ONE OF THE CONTRIBUTING FACTORS THAT CAUSED STUDENTS TO DROP OUT OF SCHOOL. (KRALOVEC AND BUELL’S, 2000) • SUGGEST THAT POLICYMAKERS SHOULD LOOK INTO THE QUALITY OF HOMEWORK BEING ASSIGNED IN ORDER TO MAKE HOMEWORK PRACTICES EFFECTIVE (BAKER AND LE TENDRE, 2005)
  • 26. • COOPER ET. AL., (2006) NOTE THAT SINCE HOMEWORK HAS BOTH POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE CONSEQUENCES, A NEED FOR CONTINUED RESEARCH IS NECESSARY.
  • 27. METHODOLOGY• RESEARCH SETTING • THIS STUDY WILL TAKE PLACE AT A PUBLIC HIGH SCHOOL IN SCHOOL YEAR 2013-2014. • THE SCHOOL USES A BLOCK SCHEDULE FORMAT WITH ALTERNATING PERIODS EACH DAY. STUDENTS TAKE THREE 100-MINUTES CLASSES PER DAY. • THE PARTICIPANTS OF THIS STUDY WILL BE STUDENTS IN MY U. S. HISTORY CLASS (N=130). • THE CLASSES CHOSEN FOR THE STUDY WILL BE CALLED CLASS A AND CLASS B. CLASS A WILL BE PERIOD 1 AND 3, WHILE CLASS B WILL BE PERIOD 2, 4, AND 6. CLASS A WILL BE NOT BE GIVEN HOMEWORK AND CLASS B WILL BE GIVEN HOMEWORK. • CONSENT FORMS WILL BE DISTRIBUTED FOR STUDENTS AND PARENTS TO SIGN. THE STUDENTS WHO RETURN THE CONSENT FORMED WITH SIGNATURES WILL PARTICIPATE IN THE STUDY.
  • 28. • INTERVENTION • DAY’S LESSONS USING LECTURES AND POWER POINT PRESENTATIONS • GROUP B WILL RECEIVE HOMEWORK • ALL GROUPS WILL RECEIVE QUIZZES
  • 29. • DATA COLLECTION • I WILL USE MY GRADE BOOK AS ONE FORM OF COLLECTING MY DATA. • I WILL SURVEY STUDENTS AT THE END OF THE PROJECT
  • 32. • COOPER POINTED OUT THAT THERE ARE LIMITATIONS TO CURRENT RESEARCH ON HOMEWORK. FOR INSTANCE, LITTLE RESEARCH HAS BEEN DONE TO ASSESS WHETHER A STUDENT'S RACE, SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS OR ABILITY LEVEL AFFECTS THE IMPORTANCE OF HOMEWORK IN HIS OR HER ACHIEVEMENT.
  • 33. • HOMEWORK 'BRIDGES THE GAP BETWEEN LEARNING AT SCHOOL AND LEARNING AT HOME' AND SHOULD THEREFORE BE CONSISTENT WITH AND CONNECTED TO THE LEARNING EXPERIENCES BEING PROVIDED IN THE CLASSROOM. AS WELL AS EMPHASIZING CURRICULUM RELEVANCE, SCHOOL HOMEWORK POLICIES SHOULD ENSURE THAT HOMEWORK • IS APPROPRIATE FOR EACH STUDENT'S AGE AND ABILITY • TAKES INTO ACCOUNT STUDENTS' OTHER COMMITMENTS, SUCH AS SPORT, PART-TIME EMPLOYMENT AND HOME RESPONSIBILITIES • TAKES INTO ACCOUNT TECHNOLOGY SUCH AS EMAIL AND THE INTERNET SO THAT STUDENTS WITHOUT ACCESS ARE NOT DISADVANTAGED.

Editor's Notes

  • #4: The literacy rates among fourth grade students in America are sobering. In a recent report by the Annie E. Casey Foundation, one out of three students scored "below basic" on the 2009 National Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP) Reading Test. Among these low performing students, 49 percent come from low-income families. Even more alarming is the fact that more than 67 percent of all US fourth graders scored "below proficient," meaning they are not reading at grade level.http://www.studentsfirst.org/pages/the-stats
  • #5: In the growing global marketplace, students will need to excel in both math and science to compete internationally as engineers, scientists, physicians, and creative entrepreneurs. Yet, in an assessment by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, 15-year-olds in the U.S. placed 25th out of 30 countries in math performance and 21st in science performance.n April 2009, Education Week reported that average math and reading scores for 17-year-olds in the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) tests have remained stagnant since the 1970s. And according to The Journal, fourth- and eighth-grade reading scores "have barely budged since 1992," despite policy and investment focused on improving overall student achievement. 
  • #6: 1900 Bok- Ladies Home Journal- mentioned how homework is detrimental to a child’s healthA nation at risk- A Nation at Risk: The Imperative For Educational Reform is the title of the 1983 report of American President Ronald Reagan's National Commission on Excellence in Education. Its publication is considered a landmark event in modern American educational history. Among other things, the report contributed to the ever-growing (and still present) sense that American schools are failing, and it touched off a wave of local, state, and federal reform efforts.No child left behind = requires states to develop assessments in basic skills. States must give these assessments to all students at select grade levels in order to receive federal school funding
  • #8: KOHN = He explains that homework not only burdens children but parents as well
  • #12: My action research project will be guided by these questions:
  • #13: . They note economically challenged students whose home environment makes it difficult for them to complete assignments due to a lack of support. Thus, understanding the effects of homework can help teachers’ better address students’ challenges
  • #14: a tool that helps young children to “develop good study habits, foster positive attitudes toward school, and communicate to students the idea that learning takes place at home and school” (Cooper, 1989. p.90). Additionally, homework is essential to honing in on independent study skills (Butler, 1987).
  • #15: GILL AND = criticized those who advocate that homework is harmful and not beneficial for student’s learning. The authors commented on the amount of homework being assigned to students. They stated that other studies showed only a moderate amount of homework was being given. Additionally, they noted that not many parents object to homework.
  • #16: ALLEMAN= PROVIDED teachers should assign homework that is meaningful: work that challenges students’ critical thinking skills, work that provides application of their acquired knowledge, or work that involves creating products. = 7 principles of what meaningful homework should be: connection of homework with the school community or environment; application of critical thinking skills by using real-world situations; involvement of parents; use of students’ background, ethnicity or culture as a resource; linkage to student’s personal situations, cost-effective projects; and use of up-to-date and easy-to-access resources.
  • #17: there is a positive correlation between the amount of homework given and student achievement. Moreover, homework should match students’ interests, and thus, may help increase motivation resulting in increased achievement (Bempechat, 2004)
  • #18: A longitudinal study with fifth grade students (Xu, M., Benson, S.N.K., Mudrey-Camino, R., & Steiner, R. P., 2010) indicated that homework fosters self-regulation skills. Homework allows students to practice self-regulatory behavior such as planning, organization, overcoming obstacles, persistence and staying on task. The study mentioned that students who complete their homework develop skills for academic work through practice making homework self-regulated learning.
  • #20: One of the main problems with homework is not whether it benefits learning; the problem is in the implementation= Cooper
  • #21: KOHN = He noted the lack of unity among researchers whether homework is beneficial to student learning
  • #22: Paul (2011) questioned the effectiveness of homework in relation to advance learning. It is the quality, not the quantity that matters According to Paul’s survey of parents, 4 out of 10 parents polled believed that most of the homework given was merely busywork. The survey reported that homework given in science, history, and English did very little to increase the students’ test scores. BENNET= PROVIDED EVIDENCE THAT HOMEWORK HARMFUL TO CHILDS HEALTH AND TAKE AWAY FAMILY TIME and blamed teachers who were not trained properly on how to give homework
  • #24: Schnurmacher (2012), a radio talk show host, complained that homework is forced labor. Homework has very little benefits, cause unnecessary stress for parents and childNelson (2007), a newspaper writer, interviewed the principal from the Street Prep School in Victorville, San Bernardino County who recently banned homework in 2006. The principal was persuaded in his decision by existing research and regular complaints from parents that teachers were giving too much homework. The principal believed that making the teacher act as coacheswould be more beneficial than giving homework when there is no coach at home to help the students. He noted that excellent teaching does not require hours of homework
  • #26: Through their interviews they found that homework often disrupts family life. In their findings, they noted that almost 50% of parents reported arguing with their children over homework, and 34% reported homework as a source of stress and struggle (Kralovec & Buell, 2000). = stated that the effects of homework cannot be visibly seen in test scores. The authors decided to do a study by not giving homework to students. The students reported that the no homework policy improved their learning and removed a great deal of stress as well as enriched their cooperative learningThey noted that homework should be used to build cognitive skills and not a “drill-and-kill” task (Baker and Le Tendre, 2005)