Tuesday, October 16, 2012

French president pushing homework ban as part of ed reforms How do you think this would go over in the United States? French President François Hollande has said he will end homework as part of a series of reforms to overhaul the country’s education system. And the reason he wants to ban homework? He doesn’t think it is fair that some kids get help from their parents at home while children who come from disadvantaged families don’t. It’s an issue that goes well beyond France, and has been part of the reason that some Americans oppose homework too. Hollande’s reform plans include increasing the number of teachers, moving the school week from four days to 4 1/2 days, overhauling the curriculum and taking steps to cut down on absenteeism. “Education is priority,” Hollande was quoted as saying by France24.com at Paris’s Sorbonne University last week. “An education program is, by definition, a societal program. Work should be done at school, rather than at home,” as a way to ensure that students who have no help at home are not disadvantaged. Despite the four-day school week, elementary school children in France spend more hours a year in school than many other developed countries because students are there all day, starting at 8:30 a.m. and ending at 4:30 p.m., with some kids staying even later. It’s not clear where the money to hire thousands more teachers will come from, but, theAssociated Press reported, Education Minister Vincent Peillon will have to figure out how to implement the reforms. One option is to shorten summer vacation, though, such a move isn’t likely to be popular because it is practically sacrosanct in France. Whether Hollande really gets all of this done is open to question. But his homework position is not original; some school districts in the United States did the same thing going back more than a century. Early in the 1900s, the influential Ladies’ Home Journal magazine called homework “barbarous,” and school districts such as Los Angeles abolished it in kindergarten through eighth grade. In fact, some educators said it caused tuberculosis, nervous conditions and heart disease in the young and that children were better off playing outside. The American Child Health Association in the 1930s labeled homework and child labor as leading killers of children who contracted tuberculosis and heart disease. Today people who oppose homework have different objections, among them, the research that suggests it doesn’t really help young children learn. http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2012/10/15/french-president-pushing-homework-ban-as-part-of-ed-reforms/

9 comments:

  1. The Homework Myth:
    Why Our Kids Get Too Much of a Bad Thing
    by Alfie Kohn

    http://www.alfiekohn.org/books/hm.htm

    NOT JUST A FRENCH THING

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  2. The dumbing down is not just going on here it is world wide. Schools are for brainwashing and indoctrination only. According Agenda 21 the educated use more resources so they must do away with education and soon reading.... think it is far fetched then look at proposals that would make a company unable to demand an education for job that does not explicitly use those specif credentials. A Janitor does not need an HS diploma, brokers do not need a degree and neither do insurance agents and many other fields. Many companies demand a degree because it shows perseverance in an individual and quit frankly, private businesses should have the ability to set standards. Not anymore ...

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    1. Well, when people like Rick Santorum talk about how not everyone needs to go to school, I can't help but wonder how many people in his spectrum of the political world think the same thing. One fatalistic train of thought is that it's the government doing it because they want a population of dependent, stupid slugs. This doesn't make much sense to me. What good does it do them? Someone needs to pay the bills and if people are uneducated and make very little money, who will pay for endless military spending?

      Business, on the other hand, has a vested interest in employing undereducated people who are able to do the job, but not smart enough to know they are getting screwed. The more educated someone is, the more likely they will demand more money and benefits.

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  3. Someone pointed out to me that they no longer teach cursive anymore - the writing style of our US Constitution - coincidence, I think not...

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    1. Their was an uproar here in Britain a couple of years back when an English teacher failed a couple of final years students on an essay because they used 'text speak' rather than proper words and sentence structure. It was suggested by some young people that it is the language of the present and should be accepted as such. I can imagine people reading their papers 50 years from how ... scratching their heads and saying... what does WHF mean? Of coarse cursive in the hands of someone like me might as well be text speak.

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  4. Decades of dumbing down. Much easier to make everyone ignorant than to make everyone brilliant.

    Ignorant people are much easier to control. Give them a cellphone to use, a store debit card and they are happy happy happy. Doesn't matter if they are living in filth.

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    1. Ignorant people are much easier to control. Give them a cellphone to use, a store debit card or a computer in their mom's basement to endlessly spew talking points and they are happy happy happy. (fixed)

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    2. and when the electricity goes out and the batteries for their calculator are not longer any good.... as I said lights out..

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    3. Ahh, but if electricity fails and batteries die, they can at least walk around with their heads up, instead of down, looking at their device du jour and texting. And drive more safely while they go to buy new batteries.

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