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Yes, Doing Your Homework Is Important

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by H. Cooper, Ph.D., J. Lindsay, Ph.D., B. Nye, Ph.D. & S. Greathouse

The more homework students complete, especially from grades six to twelve, the better they do in school, according to research. The research also demonstrates that parental attitudes toward homework play an important role in their children's education.

The study, which is the first to incorporate attitudinal measures into an analysis of the link between homework and achievement by examining the beliefs parents, teachers, and students hold regarding homework, represents an initial attempt to gather estimates of homework behavior from three sources.

The study relates teacher, student, and parent reports of the amount of homework teachers assigned and the proportion of homework students completed to students' standardized test scores and class grades.

The psychologists obtained complete data sets from over 700 "triads," which they defined as consisting of a teacher, at least one student in a teacher's class, and one parent of that student.

Homework behavior was analyzed from students in second through twelfth grades. While the amount of homework completed by students was positively related to their achievement in school, the study demonstrates that the relationship between homework completed and achievement is strongest at upper grades and for teacher-assigned grades (as opposed to performance on standardized tests).

The authors note that parental attitudes with respect to study at home have direct, positive effects on their children's attitudes toward homework and, at upper grades, on their children's classroom achievement. Attitudes about homework may be transmitted from parent to child, and parental involvement in the homework process effects their child's education.

The authors assert that "school teachers and educational policy makers should interpret these results to mean that efforts to improve parental attitudes toward homework are likely to pay off."

Reference:

"Relationships Among Attitudes About Homework, Amount of Homework Assigned and Completed, and Student Achievement" by Harris Cooper, Ph.D., James J. Lindsay, Ph.D., Scott Greathouse & Barbara Nye, Ph.D., Journal of Educational Psychology, Vol. 90, No. 1.

This information received from the American Psychological Association (APA), in Washington, DC.

Originally published 5/29/98
Revised 10/06/08 by Marlene M. Maheu, Ph.D.

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Anonymous
Posted on Tue, 06/16/2009 - 04:31

Homework is important.