General Homework Tips For Parents
- Make sure your child has a quiet, well-lit place to do homework.
- Avoid having your child do homework with the television on or in places with other
distractions, such as people coming and going.
- Make sure the materials your child needs, such as paper, pencils and a dictionary, are
available.
- Ask your child if special materials will be needed for some projects and get them in
advance.
- Help your child with time management.
- Estabsh a set time each day for doing homework. Don't let your child leave homework
until just before bedtime. Think about using a weekend morning or afternoon for
working on big projects, especially if the project involves getting together with
classmates.
- Be positive about homework.
- Tell your child how important school is. The attitude you express about homework will
be the attitude your child acquires.
- When your child does homework, you do homework.
- Show your child that the skills they are learning are related to things you do as an adult.
If your child is reading, you read too. If your child is doing math, balance your
checkbook.
- When your child asks for help, provide guidance, not answers.
- Giving answers means your child will not learn the material. Too much help teaches
your child that when the going gets rough, someone will do the work for him or her.
- When the teacher asks that you play a role in homework, do it.
- Cooperate with the teacher. It shows your child that the school and home are a team.
Follow the directions given by the teacher.
- If homework is meant to be done by your child alone, stay away.
- Too much parent involvement can prevent homework from having some positive
effects. Homework is a great way for kids to develop independent, felong learning
skills.
- Stay informed.
- Talk with your child's teacher. Make sure you know the purpose of homework and
what your child's class rules are.
- Help your child figure out what is hard homework and what is easy homework.
- Have your child do the hard work first. This will mean he will be most alert when
facing the biggest challenges. Easy material will seem to go fast when fatigue begins to
set in.
- Watch your child for signs of failure and frustration.
- Let your child take a short break if she is having trouble keeping her mind on an
assignment.
- Reward progress in homework.
- If your child has been successful in homework completion and is working hard,
celebrate that success with a special event (e.g., pizza, a walk, a trip to the park) to
reinforce the positive effort.