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The homework question is one
that is hotly debated and has strong advocates on both sides. To give
or not to give? Does homework only need to be drill and rigor?
Can homework be fun and exciting? Can it be creative? Is it a reality
of life? A necessity? We believe that there is some worth
to homework. In addition to the self discipline and organization skills it
teaches the children, it also can be a wonderful reinforcement tool and a
powerful strengthening agent. It can also be fun and exciting! Unfortunately,
homework can also be the cause of much angst and even family strife. It
saddens me greatly to hear parents moan and groan about the role of homework
in their lives… when I see parents during the summer and ask them about their
summer, the standard answer is usually one of extreme delight with the fact
that there is NO homework, that the dreaded battles and consumption of
evening hours are absent. Some parents even comment on the
difficulty of the actual homework, how it’s become so much harder for them to
do the assignments (I kid you not!) as their children have progressed through
the grades.
A reminder, please:
Homework is for your children!! If they cannot complete their assignment, the
teacher needs to know. We also have time guidelines for each
grade. If you child has put forth his/her best efforts and is nowhere
near finishing, s/he should stop working and bring the uncompleted work into
school, telling the teacher that s/he was unable to finish. You obviously
need to help in this process by making sure that your child can work
undisturbed by siblings, without the distractions of television, computers,
etc., ensured that s/he has had some time to move around after school and
even has had a snack. We believe that it’s important for parents to be
aware of what their child is doing, but not to do it for him/her. It’s
great to discuss an assignment, soliciting the children’s ideas as well as
contributing yours as appropriate. Parents certainly may review a child’s
assignment, not to correct any errors, but, depending on the child’s ability,
to request that the child review the work, that s/he find another way to
write that sentence, express that thought, solve that problem. Was it a
careless mistake or did your child really not understand the math concept?
There are those times that
homework is going to be mundane and even rote. Math facts need to get
memorized as do spelling and vocabulary words. Your child struggling
with them? Post them in visible places, play memory games in the car, share
with your child some mnemonic devices, help him/her make up some tunes or
rhymes to help solidify those facts……
Reading falls into a different
category. The time spent on independent reading does not fall into the
recommended time budget. Many teachers request that your children read to you
– and that you read to them. Some of the Hebrew teachers request that
you listen to your child read even if you don’t understand a word of what is
being read!
We understand that schoolwork
has different effects on different children and appreciate the
disparities. There is another way that parents can help with homework,
one we highly encourage – that is of putting into practice the various middot
that are so important to all of us. The fruits of your efforts
will not be ‘graded” or assessed in the traditional way, but very likely will
bring you much nachas!
Case in point: A parent of a
transfer student was thrilled to tell me that her child has received so many
phone calls for play dates and invitations to birthday parties. Mom was
just delighted with our children’s hospitality towards a new classmate.
What a beautiful commentary on our student body; we see this played over and
over. New students go home in different carpools so they may play with
new friends; “veteran” students welcome new ones to sit with them at lunch
and play with them at recess. I am so appreciative of our children’s
openness towards others; it speaks volumes: volumes about us as a
school, as a community, and you as parents. You have taught your
children well about hachnasat orchim, welcoming guests.
In my annual (it seems) appeal
for returning families to offer hospitality to new ones over Sukkot, I am
repeating the theme. Please put into practice that which we
teach. Please lead by example; please invite new families into your
sukkot, whether it be on the chag itself or on chol hamoed. These
actions teach your children so much. In a way, you really are doing your
homework – setting examples of appropriate behavior, living the model of a
value we hold so dear. Shabbat Shalom and Shanah Tovah
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News and notes from the principal of the Melvin J. Berman Hebrew Academy
Thursday, September 13, 2012
Parashat Nitzavim
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