The Truth About Homework
Needless Assignments Persist Because of Widespread Misconceptions
About Learning
By Alfie Kohn
- Para leer este artículo en Español, haga clic aquí.http://www.alfiekohn.org/teaching/deberes.htm
There's something perversely fascinating about educational
policies that are clearly at odds with the available data. Huge schools
are still being built even though we know that students tend to fare
better in smaller places that lend themselves to the creation of democratic
caring communities. Many children who are failed by the academic status
quo are forced to repeat a grade even though research shows that this
is just about the worst course of action for them. Homework continues
to be assigned in ever greater quantities
despite the absence of evidence that its necessary
or even helpful in most cases.
The dimensions of that last disparity weren't clear
to me until I began sifting through the research for a new book. To
begin with, I discovered that decades of investigation have failed
to turn up any evidence that homework is beneficial for students in
elementary school. Even if you regard standardized test results as
a useful measure, homework (some versus none, or more versus less)
isn't even correlated with higher scores at these
ages. The only effect that does show up is more negative attitudes
on the part of students who get more assignments.
In high school, some studies do find a correlation between homework
and test scores (or grades), but its usually fairly
small and it has a tendency to disappear when more sophisticated statistical
controls are applied. Moreover, theres no evidence
that higher achievement is due to the homework even when an association
does appear. It isn't hard to think of other explanations
for why successful students might be in classrooms where more homework
is assigned or why they might spend more time on it
than their peers do.
The results of national and international exams raise further doubts.
One of many examples is an analysis of 1994 and 1999 Trends in Mathematics
and Science Study (TIMSS) data from 50 countries. Researchers David
Baker and Gerald Letendre were scarcely able to conceal their surprise
when they published their results last year: Not
only did we fail to find any positive relationships,
but the overall correlations between national average
student achievement and national averages in [amount of homework
assigned] are all negative.
Finally, there isn't a shred of evidence to support
the widely accepted assumption that homework yields nonacademic benefits
for students of any age. The idea that homework teaches good work
habits or develops positive character traits (such as self-discipline
and independence) could be described as an urban myth except for the
fact that its taken seriously in suburban and rural
areas, too.
In short, regardless of ones criteria, there is no
reason to think that most students would be at any sort of disadvantage
if homework were sharply reduced or even eliminated. Nevertheless,
the overwhelming majority of American schools elementary
and secondary, public and private continue to require
their students to work a second shift by bringing academic assignments
home. Not only is this requirement accepted uncritically, but the
amount of homework is growing, particularly in the early grades. A
large, long-term national survey found that the proportion of six-
to-eight-year-old children who reported having homework on a given
day had climbed from 34 percent in 1981 to 58 percent in 1997
and the weekly time spent studying at home more than doubled.
Sandra Hofferth of the University of Maryland, one of the authors
of that study, has just released an update based on 2002 data. Now
the proportion of young children who had homework on a specific day
jumped to 64 percent, and the amount of time they spent on it climbed
by another third. The irony here is painful because with younger children
the evidence to justify homework isn't merely dubious
its nonexistent.
So why do we do something where the cons (stress, frustration, family
conflict, loss of time for other activities, a possible diminution
of interest in learning) so clearly outweigh the pros? Possible reasons
include a lack of respect for research, a lack of respect for children
(implicit in a determination to keep them busy after school), a reluctance
to question existing practices, and the top-down pressures to teach
more stuff faster in order to pump up test scores so we can chant
Were number one!
All these explanations are plausible, but I think theres
also something else responsible for our continuing to feed children
this latter-day cod-liver oil. Because many of us believe its
just common sense that homework would provide academic benefits, we
tend to shrug off the failure to find any such benefits. In turn,
our belief that homework ought to help is based on some fundamental
misunderstandings about learning.
Consider the assumption that homework should be beneficial just because
it gives students more time to master a topic or skill. (Plenty of
pundits rely on this premise when they call for extending the school
day or year. Indeed, homework can be seen as a way of prolonging the
school day on the cheap.) Unfortunately, this reasoning turns out
to be woefully simplistic. Back when experimental
psychologists mainly studied words and nonsense syllables, it was
thought that learning inevitably depended upon time,
reading researcher Richard C. Anderson and his colleagues explain.
But subsequent research suggests that this belief
is false.
The statement People need time to learn things
is true, of course, but it doesn't tell us much of
practical value. On the other hand, the assertion More
time usually leads to better learning is considerably
more interesting. Its also demonstrably untrue, however,
because there are enough cases where more time doesn't
lead to better learning.
In fact, more hours are least likely to produce better outcomes when
understanding or creativity is involved. Anderson and his associates
found that when children are taught to read by focusing on the meaning
of the text (rather than primarily on phonetic skills), their learning
does not depend on amount of instructional time.
In math, too, as another group of researchers discovered, time on
task is directly correlated to achievement only if both the activity
and the outcome measure are focused on rote recall as opposed to problem
solving.
Carole Ames of Michigan State University points out that it isn't
quantitative changes in behavior
such as requiring students to spend more hours in front
of books or worksheets that help children learn better.
Rather, its qualitative changes
in the ways students view themselves in relation to the task, engage
in the process of learning, and then respond to the learning activities
and situation. In turn, these attitudes and responses
emerge from the way teachers think about learning and, as a result,
how they organize their classrooms. Assigning homework is unlikely
to have a positive effect on any of these variables. We might say
that education is less about how much the teacher covers than about
what students can be helped to discover and more time
wont help to bring about that shift.
Alongside an overemphasis on time is the widely held belief that homework
reinforces the skills that
students have learned or, rather, have been taught -
in class. But what exactly does this mean? It wouldn't
make sense to say Keep practicing until you understand
because practicing doesn't create understanding
just as giving kids a deadline doesn't teach time-management
skills. What might make sense is to say Keep practicing
until what you re doing becomes automatic.
But what kinds of proficiencies lend themselves to this sort of improvement?
The answer is behavioral responses. Expertise in tennis requires lots
of practice; its hard to improve your swing without
spending a lot of time on the court. But to cite an example like that
to justify homework is an example of what philosophers call begging
the question. It assumes precisely what has to be proved, which is
that intellectual pursuits are like tennis.
The assumption that they are analogous derives from behaviorism, which
is the source of the verb reinforce
as well as the basis of an attenuated view of learning. In the 1920s
and 30s, when John B. Watson was formulating his theory
that would come to dominate education, a much less famous researcher
named William Brownell was challenging the drill-and-practice approach
to mathematics that had already taken root. If
one is to be successful in quantitative thinking, one needs a fund
of meanings, not a myriad of automatic responses,
he wrote. Drill does not develop meanings. Repetition
does not lead to understandings. In fact, if arithmetic
becomes meaningful, it becomes so in spite of drill.
Brownells insights have been enriched by a long line
of research demonstrating that the behaviorist model is, if you ll
excuse the expression, deeply superficial. People spend their lives
actively constructing theories about how the world works, and then
reconstructing them in light of new evidence. Lots of practice can
help some students get better at remembering an answer, but not to
get better at or even accustomed to - thinking. And
even when they do acquire an academic skill through practice, the
way they acquire it should give us pause. As psychologist Ellen Langer
has shown, When we drill ourselves in a certain
skill so that it becomes second nature, we may
come to perform that skill mindlessly,
locking us into patterns and procedures that are less than ideal.
But even if practice is sometimes useful, were not
entitled to conclude that homework of this type works for most students.
It isn't of any use for those who don t
understand what they re doing. Such homework makes
them feel stupid; gets them accustomed to doing things the wrong way
(because whats really reinforced
are mistaken assumptions); and teaches them to conceal what they don t
know. At the same time, other students in the same class already have
the skill down cold, so further practice for them is a waste of time.
You've got some kids, then, who don t
need the practice and others who cant use it.
Furthermore, even if practice was helpful for most students, that
doesn't mean they need to do it at home. In my research
I found a number of superb teachers (at different grade levels and
with diverse instructional styles) who rarely, if ever, found it necessary
to assign homework. Some not only didn't feel a need
to make students read, write, or do math at home; they preferred to
have students do these things during class where it was possible to
observe, guide, and discuss.
Finally, any theoretical benefit of practice homework must be weighed
against the effect it has on students interest in
learning. If slogging through worksheets dampens ones
desire to read or think, surely that wouldn't be worth
an incremental improvement in skills. And when an activity feels like
drudgery, the quality of learning tends to suffer, too. That so many
children regard homework as something to finish as quickly as possible
or even as a significant source of stress - helps to
explain why it appears not to offer any academic advantage even for
those who obediently sit down and complete the tasks they've
been assigned. All that research showing little value to homework
may not be so surprising after all.
Supporters of homework rarely look at things from the students
point of view, though; instead, kids are regarded as inert objects
to be acted on: Make them practice and they ll get
better. My argument isn't just that this viewpoint
is disrespectful, or that its a residue of an outdated
stimulus-response psychology. I'm also suggesting
its counterproductive. Children cannot be made to
acquire skills. They aren't vending machines such
that we put in more homework and get out more learning.
But just such misconceptions are pervasive in all sorts of neighborhoods,
and they re held by parents, teachers, and researchers
alike. Its these beliefs that make it so hard even
to question the policy of assigning regular homework. We can be shown
the paucity of supporting evidence and it wont have
any impact if were wedded to folk wisdom (practice
makes perfect; more time equals better results).
On the other hand, the more we learn about learning, the more willing
we may be to challenge the idea that homework has to be part of schooling.
Copyright © 2006 by Alfie Kohn. This article may be downloaded, reproduced,
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