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Anne Leedom
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leedom1ae - > Parenting Bookmark's Parenting Scoop -> Coping with Homework Battles 101
Coping with Homework Battles 101
As school is now back in full swing life is back into a routine, which I highly prefer. However with that predictability comes one of the not so great parts of my children's academic life..homework. We don't have too big of an issue with it in my home but it does create occasional chaos and I know it does for dozens of other families. Author's Chick Moorman and Thomas Haller have some great suggestions on what to say and not say to your kids about homework. I hope they help!

Homework can be a battle or a breeze. It can create conflict or cooperation. It can produce tension or focused attention.  Which of these outcomes occurs in your home depends in great measure on how you talk to your children during that important time period. To help your child's homework experience be productive and stress free, consider the following ten best things to say to him or her during homework time.
 
1.  "It's study time." Don’t even mention the word "homework." Have a study time, a study table, and study materials. Study time occurs whether there is homework or not. This eliminates the common child response, “But I don’t have any homework.” Some parents prefer to call this time period feed the brain time. Whether you call it study time or feed the brain time, it is important to make this a family commitment.  We all feed our brains during this time. If you are not willing to make this commitment as a parent to feed your own brain during this important family time, don’t ask your child to. 
 
2.  "Let me know if you want my help." Refrain from giving unsolicited help. Help that is not asked for is resented and is often not even needed.  Give your child the space to ask for help if he needs it. Learning to ask for help is an important skill that every child needs to learn. So is struggling on your own for a while.
 
3.  "Act as if you know." Children will often tell you, "I don't know how to do it." Resist showing them right away. They are doing their "I can't" act. Know that it is an act. Encourage them to choose a different act by saying, "Act as if you can." Other ways to send the same message include: "Pretend like you know how." "Play like you know." "If you did know how to begin, how would you begin?" "If you did know what to write, what would you write?" Asking children to "act as if" does not mean they will do it correctly. It gets them started. It gets them doing something. You can correct incorrect doing. Not doing anything is impossible to correct.
 
4.  "You have a lot of assignments to do here. Which two do you think are the most important?" Do not let your children study for long periods of time. Family time is MORE important than study time. When the teachers give more than is doable in the study time you have structured (90 minutes for high school, 60 minutes for middle school, 30 minutes for elementary school), call the teachers and let them know they are assigning too much material. Ask your child, "Which two of your assignments do you think are most important?" This requires her to think and to set priorities, teaching her a valuable life skill in the process.
 
5.  "Study time is over." Pushing beyond the set study time creates diminished results. Set a limit and stick to it. Hold to the set time schedule for study time.       &n bsp;       &nb sp; 
 
6.  "It's time for a time out." Frustration may occur. Suggest your child take a time out if you see her becoming overstressed. Shoot some baskets, ride bikes, go for a walk. Get away from the schoolwork for a while. When she comes back to study time, she will bring a fresh mind and a fresh attitude.
 
7.  Refrain from making evaluative comments such as "good job" or "excellent paper."
These global remarks do little to teach why the effort was good or excellent. Instead, make your praise descriptive. Simply describe. "I can read every word." "This sentence got my attention and I wanted to keep reading." "You stayed right on it and finished that section in ten minutes." These factual statements give valuable information.  Descriptive praise also allows the child to make the evaluation. When he says to himself, "I did a good job," the evaluation is coming from the inside out. 
 
8.  "Do you want me to check it?" Sometimes children want your checking help. Sometimes they do not. Let them make this decision.
 
9.  "Let me show you an example."  This is teaching, not doing it for them. Show your child a sample, example, or possibility. Allow her to decide how to apply your idea. Let her do the problems she was assigned.
 
10."Would you be willing to put your name on it?" This statement is not used to check whether your son or daughter remembered to put their name on the paper. It is a statement about the relationship between pride and effort. "Would you be willing to put your name on it?" really means, "Are you proud enough of it to sign it?" Help your children learn to develop an internal standard of excellence so they know how this piece of work stacks up against their personal standard.
 
Your Parent Talk around study time and school assignments is critical. It can help or hinder, motivate or discourage, inspire or wound. Use the statements above to help you create a helpful study time for all. In fact, why not study these suggestions and put them to use during your next family feed the brain time?
 

Thomas Haller and Chick Moorman are co-authors of The 10 Commitments: Parenting with Purpose. Visit their blog at: www.uncommon-parenting.com.
Topics: parenting, homework, school
posted by leedom1ae on Tuesday, October 20, 2009 at 11:24 AM
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posted by creatress on Oct 21, 2009 at 12:06 PM

GREAT tips! I totally agree with contacting the teacher if homework takes more than 1 hour. I've had to do this many times. They're always glad to know that your child is struggling and happy to modify the quantity of work.

Two more tips I would add...
-Keep distractions to a minimum and offer crunchy, chewy or sour food to eat while working. This can actually improve focus and retention in most children.

-If your child has a hard time with TIME, look into a visual timer such as the Time Timer (http://www.timetimer.com/) Especially great for special needs children.

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