This situation is appalling.
First, the kinds of high-performing kids who go to HCSSiM are working harder than ever during the year; they need a break from regular work. Second, the work that gets sent home is--in general--the worst sort of homework you can imagine. A sampling:
- Outline n chapters of a bio/history/government textbook, where n ≥ 3. My experience is that few kids, if any, are taught how to outline, so these wind up being lists of section headings. Teachers typically don't even read or give feedback on this work. I wonder, too: if a kid can get "enough" out of this type of learning experience, what do teachers think the are adding in the actual classroom?
- Write out, by hand, 100 vocabulary words and definitions. (My colleague and friend Erica, soon to be a teacher in a Massachusetts middle school, asked "If the work is so low-level that it's impossible to tell whether one kid has copied another's assignment, why would you even assign it?"
- Read a 400 page, mostly stream-of-consciousness novel chosen by the teacher, with little or no guidance.
- Fill out dozens of worksheets practicing math facts, or vocabulary from a foreign langauge, or ...
Assignments like these replicate the worst parts of the school experience--repetitive, low-level work with little attention to context or purpose besides "get it done"--without any of the other experiences that can make going to school worthwhile. What's more, they put this school-sucked-dry experience into the summer, which kids typically enjoy.
Why do kids who enjoy learning prefer summer to school? I can think of three reasons:
- During the summer, kids can choose what they will do and when they can do it.
Of course, choice is more satisfying than constraint. But study after study has shown that giving kids choices about what learning activities they do increases student engagement and the activities' effectiveness. So taking the choice out of summer learning activities is a double-whammy. - During the summer, kids do things that they find relevant.
In actual summer academic programs--like the ones my kids and my friends' kids do--the learning activities are focused on things kids actually want to know about. And kids don't choose to do things that they find irrelevant. - During the summer, kids do things that are challenging.
Have you seen a kid spend hours practicing a skateboard move, or throwing a football, or playing a videogame? Kids don't do things they find easy--they find things that are at a "can't-quite-do-it-yet" level, and when they've mastered something, they move on.
So here's my remix challenge, in three parts.
I. Find an actual summer homework assignment passed out to kids in grades 6-12.
II. Rework it to fit the three criteria--choice, relevance, adaptable challenge.
III. Post it here, in the comments, or via email to me at pjkarafiol@gmail.com.
Three guidelines:
- Obviously, the made-over assignment must address many of the same objectives and issues as the original.
- Obviously, the assignment must be one that students can complete, with some reasonable degree of success, on their own. The assignment doesn't have to be easy, but (e.g.) feedback might be built-in or easy to obtain.
- Third, the assignment shouldn't take more than 4-5 hours of work, 8 tops. Really, guys, this is the summer. If you want the kids to attend summer school, teach an actual class.
As extra credit, ask a student to suggest a summer homework "makeover" of their own.
Here are two to get you going:
1. For the AP Biology Chapter 1 assignment on basic physics and chemistry: read two articles from one of the following periodicals (Scientific American, New York Times Science Tuesday, Discover Magazine) written within the last year about a discovery or problem in biology. For each, identify what chemical or physical processes are described in the article, and be ready to give a short (3-5) minute presentation on the underlying chemistry or physics described.
2. For the vocabulary list -- given the same list of words, find instances of 20 of these words in recent writing (last five years) on the web, in periodicals, or published books. For each, give the surrounding paragraph, explain what the word means in context, and write a sentence or two evaluating whether the author should have chosen a less-esoteric word (with a suggestion).
Happy end of summer!
PS: Full Disclosure -- I havea a summer assignment of my own, but it involves choice, is not onerous, and shouldn't take more than 3-4 hours to complete. Here it is: http://www.wpcp.org/StudentLife/SummerAssignments.aspx
From Amber & Christine--thanks!
ReplyDeleteThe assignment: Read, with no guidance or discussion or note-taking or anything, the following two novels: Kaffir Boy by Mark Mathabane and Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe. It should be noted that both of these works will be re-read during the course of the school year by the class.
Remix: In preparation for discussion of two works that both raise issues of racial tensions, specifically White supremacy over black African people, find two or three current articles (from leading newspapers or periodicals) that talk about the issues of race, particularly relating to black racial minorities or colonialism. Write a 3-4 page reflection on your readings, including your own personal experience with race/racism/racial tensions. Be prepared for an opening discussion on the theme with questions and observations from your studies.