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Aeicha @ Word Spelunking

Monday, November 28, 2016

Guest Post: The Importance of Homework


The Importance of Homework

Admittedly, it’s a tough sell explaining to children the importance of homework. After all, a school day is more than just grammar, math, science, and history. School-aged children learn to navigate social situations, deal with different personalities, and development a degree of independence. All of this combined can get stressful for children. 

Nonetheless, the importance of homework cannot get overstated so hire a cleaning service (apartment cleaning NYC) to do the housework and prepare to help your children. Homework serves as an opportunity for children to make mistakes and learn from those mistakes without the stress of test scores and performance evaluations. Additionally, for parents, homework serves as a window into your child’s strengths and weaknesses in the classroom. Homework is the bridge between school, home, and either higher education or the workforce. 

When a student gets assigned homework that students learns to work through problems alone or semi-independently under the guidance of a parent or tutor. Learning to work through problems independently is a vital personal skill. It enables students to gather, organize, and synthesize information. It increases critical thinking and time management skills. Beyond that, homework gives students and sense of accomplishment without pressure. 

Homework assignments also allow parents to observe progress in school. It’s a parent and school accountability tool. When a teacher sends after school tasks home parents can see that a school is on track regarding addressing age appropriate curriculum. Homework is a school’s opportunity to demonstrate to parents that children are being challenged to develop critical life skills and social context. 

Children, like adults, are unique. They learn differently from each other. They learn at a pace that is specific to each student. Homework levels the playing field for students who need extra time and extra effort to compete with students who naturally and effortlessly absorb and apply information. 

It sounds cliché, but human beings learn more through failure than through easy success. It’s only through focus and learning to work through problems that children get educated and develop a life skill such as work ethic, which allows every student the opportunity for future success.


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DISCLAIMER: This is a sponsored guest post, written by another author, and Word Spelunking was compensated for sharing. The thoughts and opinions in the post belong solely to the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Word Spelunking.

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