Homework Part Two

I have yet to figure out how “homework” fits into “homeschool.”

First of all, if you want to be technical, all of our work is homework, as it is all done at home. I know, it’s not the same…and yet, it sounds kind of silly to label something else homework, when we’re always doing homework.

I also haven’t figured out if I *should* be assigning extra work just to assign it, and if so, at what grade level (because it sure hasn’t happened yet!). One of the reasons we homeschool is to cut down on unnecessary busy work, and I view a lot of homework, particularly in early elementary school, as just that. I know that practice and repetition are important, but then there’s overkill, and I don’t want my children to come to dread school because of redundancy.

It’s also not like they ever have unfinished work that needs to be taken home and completed, either…if they haven’t finished something, we just wait to move on until it’s done. Of course, in the event of someone (and by someone, I mean Bunny), being stubborn about completing his or her work, I will occasionally just tell that student that the work will be completed after school is done, when the other student is having playtime. But that’s really a wilfulness issue, not an “inability to complete something during classroom time because of the large number of students requiring direction” issue.

Now, in the case of them struggling with a concept, I suppose I have technically given them “homework,” but even then, it’s still almost always done during school time. An extra math worksheet until they’ve mastered a new skill is the most obvious example. I have very rarely had them work on something after the school day was over, but again, that’s usually related to a struggle of the wills, in which they tell me they “can’t” do something so often that I finally tell them that they’ll have to spend free time working on it until they feel that they can.

It doesn’t usually take them too long.

I have also been know to have them do extra writing, to work on their creative writing skills, but they have no idea that they’re doing it for school–they just think I want them to write me stories. They don’t realize that they’re working on brainstorming ideas, character developement, plot creation, etc. Does it really count as homework if they don’t know that that’s what it is?

Anyway, I do know that at this point, their evenings are school-free. We have no reason to work on school work after our school day is done, and I see that pattern continuing for quite a while. Even when they need to start doing research and writing more complex papers, I have a feeling that a lot of that will be accomplished during the hours that most people consider a normal school day, because with such a small class, it’s inevitable that our school day will always be shorter than that of their public (or private) school counterparts.

Homework

Ever since Moose started in the early childhood program over two years ago, he’s had weekly homework. It’s been a real journey to get it done–his first year in school, he couldn’t understand what to do, or maybe he just didn’t want to do it. Either way, every time we sat down to work on homework (matching shapes and colors, reading a story, that kind of thing), he would resist. Mightily.

His second year, he was more agreeable. He would protest a bit when we sat down to do the work, but he would actually do it, and do it correctly. I got a better idea of what he was learning, and I think he had a feeling of success from completing the assignments.

This year, he’s actually started asking to do his homework before I ask him. He’s also been working on some new skills, such as writing his name and cutting out shapes. And he’s been improving steadily. His writing and drawing are so much better than they were even at the start of this school year.

Today he got back his best assignment yet. He had lots of smiley faces from his teacher for a job well done. Good coloring, good writing (even a number, which I didn’t even know he could do, as I’ve been focusing on letters with him), good matching. I was so proud to see that his teacher recognized his improvement on this particular week’s worth–I’m always worried that my motherly pride is getting in the way of knowing how he’s really progressing.

But I guess this time, motherly pride and the teacher were in agreement–great job Moose!