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Student Achievement What the Research Says

This One Change From Teachers Can Make Homework More Equitable

By Sarah D. Sparks 鈥 December 05, 2022 4 min read
Photo of a mom or tutor helping a young, sad girl do her homework while at home.
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Homework can deepen inequities for low-income students at school if teachers judge students鈥 effort by their families鈥 involvement.

That鈥檚 according to a new study in the journal Educational Researcher, which found teachers were more likely to attribute missed homework to irresponsibility or parent disinterest with low-income students and students of color than with wealthier or white students.

The study was part of a broader longitudinal study of more than 4,000 middle school students and their teachers. Researchers observed 80 students and their teachers and conducted in-depth interviews with both, as well as with the students鈥 families.

Across both elementary and middle schools, 鈥渢eachers were interpreting homework through this meritocratic lens, seeing it as the product of motivation and competence and effort, and not as the product of the kinds of circumstances that students or their families might be facing at home,鈥 said Jessica McCrory Calarco, an associate professor of sociology at Indiana University and the lead author of the study.

鈥淲hen teachers use that cultural framework to interpret what鈥檚 going on in their classrooms, it can lead them to judge and punish students and treat students in potentially harmful ways,鈥 Calarco said.

As one teacher in the study noted, 鈥淚鈥檝e had a few students this year who have been reluctant to do homework. It鈥檚 been mainly the [lower-level students].
Probably math isn鈥檛 their favorite subject, so they wouldn鈥檛 want to do their math homework, even when it鈥檚 easy. And when it鈥檚 not easy, they especially don鈥檛 want to do it.鈥

The findings are 鈥渦nfortunate but not surprising,鈥 said Joyce Epstein, a homework researcher and the director of the Center on School, Family, and Community Partnerships, at Johns Hopkins University, who was not involved in Calarco鈥檚 study.

鈥淧arents are in fact interested in their children鈥檚 work and success. What they鈥檙e not interested in is being told they鈥檙e supposed to know how to teach every subject at every grade level, just because somebody said it was a good idea,鈥 Epstein said.

Teachers who took a meritocratic approach to homework were more likely to adopt punitive homework policies: giving extra credit on tests for students who turned in homework, or keeping students back from recess for not completing it, for example. Meritocratic teachers also were more likely to assign homework that students could not complete independently, either because it was too difficult or required input from parents.

One mother of a 5th grader in the study said she barely passed her GED high school equivalency exam, and often struggled to help her son with math. 鈥淚 still can鈥檛 really figure out division. . . . [Jesse will] ask me a question, and I鈥檒l go look at it, and it鈥檚 like algebra, in 5th grade,鈥 the mother told researchers. 鈥淪ometimes you just feel stupid because he鈥檚 in 5th grade, and I鈥檓 like鈥擨 should be able to help my son with his homework in 5th grade.鈥

In an earlier related study using the same students, Calarco and her colleagues also found teachers felt to excuse their children when they failed to complete homework. Existing homework policies tended to be applied in favor of students of parents who were highly involved in the school.

鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 a consistent application of rules,鈥 Calarco said. 鈥淚t was much more rooted in the status and the power of families ... not only in terms of who actually was able to provide more hands-on help at home, but also in the extent to which teachers felt that they had to grant exemptions to students from more privileged backgrounds.鈥

Designing better homework

Prior research suggests the majority of parent homework help ends up being counterproductive, including doing work for a student or providing confusing or inaccurate explanations for a concept.

鈥淗omework is important, proven to be useful for children鈥檚 learning, but we can all do better in designing good homework as opposed to just more of it,鈥 Epstein said.

She argued that teachers should be given more time to work with each other and parents to design homework policies and assignments.

鈥淲e should never ask parents to teach a school subject. They don鈥檛 want to do it, they can鈥檛 do it, they shouldn鈥檛 be asked to do it,鈥 Epstein said. 鈥淲hat we鈥檝e learned is that to increase the family connection with their child on homework, ... you design homework to help the student become the leader in this work.鈥

Among the recommendations:

  • Do not design homework that requires parents to teach or check content knowledge.
  • Ensure students can complete assignments at home without help.
  • Design separate, ungraded assignments to engage families (e.g. a family oral history project). 鈥淚f we design homework so the youngster is showing, sharing, demonstrating what they鈥檝e learned in class, the parent becomes an appreciator of how the youngster is growing their skills and abilities,鈥 Epstein said.
  • Incorporate supplemental exercises or model lessons in separate communications with parents, such as school newsletters or literacy nights.

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