Students Probably Do Less Homework Than You Think, Study Says

Students Probably Do Less Homework Than You Think
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The portrait of the American student buried under a crippling load of homework has been way overblown in news articles, argues a new report from the Brookings Institution, a Washington-based think tank.

Homework loads have actually been stable over the last 30 years, despite front-page reports of overworked kids and a century-old "war on homework," according to the report, one of three released Tuesday by Brookings' Brown Center on Education Policy. The study relies on federal surveys of students before they took the National Assessment of Educational Progress, a parental survey by MetLife, and University of California, Los Angeles's Higher Education Research Institute survey of college freshmen.

The image of kids drowning in homework has been swirling for years. In 1900, Ladies Home Journal editor Edward Bok called homework "A National Crime at the Feet of Parents," resulting in what the new study's author, Tom Loveless, called "an anti-homework campaign ... that grew into a national crusade."

In 1901, California banned homework for any student younger than 15. More recently, major publications have joined the war on homework, arguing it hurts students -- in part, said Loveless, due to the No Child Left Behind Act's focus on student performance. Last fall, The Atlantic magazine featured a titled "My Daughter's Homework is Killing Me."

The war on homework also has gained steam recently from parents concerned about a new wave of standardized tests attached to the Common Core State Standards.

But the Brookings study gives ammunition to those who worry students actually may have too little homework.

"When you read the anti-homework story in The New York Times, you picture kids under intense pressure to achieve, like a rat race," said Loveless, referring to a 2011 article that described "a wave of districts across the nation trying to remake homework" amid cries of over-testing. "When you look at the history of complaints over homework, you have this idea of kids who are crushed."

But that's more the exception than the rule, Loveless said. He found, in general, that "the homework load has been remarkably stable since 1984.". According to the study, 22 percent of 9-year-olds in 2012 reported they had no homework, compared with 5 percent who reported having more than two hours of daily homework.

The National Assessment of Educational Progress survey asked questions of students aged 9, 13 and 17. The average homework load for 9-year-olds has increased since 1984. But Loveless said that can be explained by fewer students who report having no homework, and an increased number of students who report having less than an hour of nightly homework.

For 13-year-olds, according to National Assessment of Educational Progress, the load has lightened slightly. Students who reported one or two hours of work per night declined from 29 percent in 1984 to 23 percent in 2012. Students reporting less than one hour of homework a night increased from 36 percent to 44 percent during the same period.

Meanwhile, the number of 17-year-olds reporting no homework grew from 22 percent in 1984 to 27 percent in 2012. Eleven percent of 17-year-olds told questioners in 2012 they simply didn't do their work.

"NAEP data do not support the idea that a large and growing number of students have an onerous amount of homework," Loveless wrote.

The parent survey found 61 percent of parents satisfied with the amount of homework their kids got in 2007. Only 38.4 percent of the college freshmen surveyed by UCLA said they spent at least six hours per week studying or doing homework in 2012.

Overall, Loveless concluded, "homework horror stories" should be told in better context, and seem to come from "the very personal discontents" of a small groups of parents. He said public policy is too blunt an instrument to settle the homework fight.

Others said they were unconvinced by the Brookings study.

"They've dug up old data ... to justify the argument that people who are concerned about homework are a bunch of whining parents who don't like schools anyway," said Etta Kralovec, an education professor at the University of Arizona whose books include The End of Homework.

Kralovec said she thinks homework should be abolished entirely, and breaks down according to socioeconomic status. "I see kids in upper-middle class families, and there's huge expectations on those kids to do well in school and to get accepted into Ivy-League colleges," she said. "Poor kids, who have oftentimes uneducated parents or no educational resources, work on a very different problem: Not having access for resources to do it."

Michael Petrilli, executive vice president of the right-leaning Thomas B. Fordham Institute, also noted the socioeconomic homework divide, but drew the opposite conclusion.

"The concern about American kids doing too much homework is not only overblown, it's incorrect," Petrilli said. "Most American teenagers are going to a non-selective college and university, and most of them are not being asked to do much homework."

Cathy Vatterott, a professor of education at University of Missouri, St. Louis, who runs a website called "The Homework Lady," decried the Brookings report, saying its purpose is "to scare us into thinking that our schools are getting soft." She said every few weeks, she hears from parents whose "child's homework is so excessive they give up family dinners and sleep to get it all done."

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Before You Go

Celebrities Who Have Opened Schools
Pitbull(01 of14)
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In between producing megahits like "Timber," rapper Pitbull opened a charter school in the fall of 2013. His school, based in Miami, is called the Sports Leadership And Management Academy (SLAM), and it educates children on core subjects with an emphasis on sports and sports management.

"If sports is what you love, one way or another, it's a business you can get involved with ... whether you're a therapist, an attorney, a broadcaster," the singer said in a 2013 NPR interview. "They're already labeling me 'Mr. Education.'"
(credit:Getty Images)
Jalen Rose (02 of14)
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In 2011, former NBA player and current sports broadcaster Jalen Rose founded a Detroit-based charter school called the Jalen Rose Leadership Academy (JRLA). The new school is still evolving, though. After one year, the school hired a completely new staff, adopted a more rigorous curriculum system and lengthened the school day.

"My goal at JRLA is to provide a private school education in a public school setting so that a student's ZIP code doesn't dictate the education they receive," Rose wrote in a 2013 blog for The Huffington Post. "I am humbled by the opportunity to help further the education of our youth as well as be able to create jobs for my community."
(credit:Getty Images)
Shakira(03 of14)
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Latin American sensation Shakira has been an advocate for education causes. Using funds from her nonprofit organization, she has opened eight schools in her native country of Colombia. She has also lobbied Latin American leaders to support early childhood education.

Her schools -- the most recent was scheduled to open in February 2014 -- serve needy children in disadvantaged communities.

“I want to demonstrate ... how we can change the lives, not only of the children who come to school, but also their families. Entire communities can be transformed when you have a school that functions properly,” the singer told Billboard.
(credit:Shutterstock)
Andre Agassi(04 of14)
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In 2011, tennis champion Andre Agassi partnered with Canyon Capital Realty Advisors LLC to create the Canyon-Agassi Charter School Facilities Fund. By December 2013, the fund, which is designed to invest in the building of charter schools, had established 23 schools. In 2001, Agassi founded the Las Vegas-based Andre Agassi College Preparatory Academy. (credit:Getty Images)
Deion Sanders(05 of14)
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Former NFL star Deion Sanders founded Prime Prep Academy in Texas in 2012. However, the charter school has already seen its share of challenges. Sanders, a coach for the school, was fired from his job in October 2013 for allegedly assaulting an employee. Although he was quickly rehired, he was fired again in December. Additionally, the Texas Education Agency is currently investigating the school for a number of allegations, including the misuse of funds.

Prime Prep has been plagued with administrators who don’t have the expertise or experience that it takes to have the institution we want it to be,” Prime Prep Board President T. Christopher Lewis said, according to the Dallas Morning News.
(credit:AP)
Oprah(06 of14)
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Oprah Winfrey opened the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls in South Africa in 2007. While the school has suffered from its share of controversy -- a school employee was accused of sexually abusing several students -- it is still up and running. The media mogul has also donated heavily to American charter schools. In 2010, she gave $6 million to charter schools across the country. (credit:Getty Images)
Will Smith & Jada Pinkett Smith(07 of14)
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Actors Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith opened a private elementary school, the New Village Leadership Academy, in 2008. However, the school, which reportedly had ties to the church of Scientology, was closed in 2013.

Although the school reportedly used teaching methods developed by Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard, school leaders denied that it was anything but secular, according to the Associated Press.

"We are a secular school, and just like all nonreligious independent schools, faculty and staff do not promote their own religions at school or pass on the beliefs of their particular faith to children," New Village Academy director Jacqueline Olivier told the Los Angeles Times in 2008.
(credit:AP)
Angelina Jolie(08 of14)
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Notorious humanitarian and actress Angelina Jolie opened an all-girls school in Afghanistan in 2013. The school was funded by proceeds from Jolie's jewelry collection, Style of Jolie. She reportedly hopes to use further proceeds to build more schools in impoverished areas, according to Forbes. (credit:Getty Images)
Magic Johnson(09 of14)
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Former NBA star and sports analyst Magic Johnson has opened several alternative high schools for students who have dropped out or are at-risk of dropping out of school. Currently, there are four Magic Johnson Bridgescape Academies in Georgia, two in Illinois, one in New Jersey, one in North Carolina and eight in Ohio.

According to the Bridgescape Acadmy website, the alternative schools' "student-focused program provides an opportunity to earn a high school diploma at a pace suitable to their schedule, lifestyle and learning needs."
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Kevin Johnson(10 of14)
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Before he became the mayor of Sacramento, Calif., this former NBA star founded a charter school network called the St. HOPE Public Schools, which has a center for early childhood education, an elementary school, a middle school and a high school. Johnson is also married to education reform powerhouse Michelle Rhee. (credit:AP)
Tony Bennett(11 of14)
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Legendary singer Tony Bennett and his wife, Susan Benedetto, founded the Frank Sinatra School of the Arts in 1999. The performing arts school is one of New York City's few audition-only schools. It's currently located near Bennett's childhood home in Astoria, Queens.

"We're the opposite of instant fame," Bennett said of the school, according to USA Today. "We want to teach the students quality and to do things that will last forever."
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Serena Williams(12 of14)
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In 2008, tennis superstar Serena Williams opened up The Serena Williams Secondary School in Kenya with funds from the Serena Williams Foundation. As explained on the Serena Williams Foundation website, in Kenya, kids have to pay $1 a week to attend school, a sum that is unaffordable for some families. The Serena Williams Secondary School allows kids to attend school for free. Several years later, the athlete opened another school, the Wee Secondary School. (credit:Getty Images)
Petra Nemcova(13 of14)
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In 2011, Czech model Petra Nemcova opened a school in earthquake-ravaged Haiti with funds from her Happy Hearts Fund. She built the school after going through the Thailand tsunami of 2004 that took the life of her then-fiance. Nemcova, who only survived the tsunami after clinging to a tree for eight hours, said that during that time, she heard the voices of suffering children.

"I was not able to help those children," Nemcova told ABC News in 2011. "You heard them screaming for help and after some time you couldn't hear their voices anymore."
(credit:Getty Images)
Madonna(14 of14)
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In 2013, Madonna opened several community schools in Malawi. According to the Associated Press, her work there provided classrooms for thousands of students who were previously learning outdoors.

"I love Malawi, I am committed to help end poverty here," she said at the time, according to the outlet.
(credit:AP)