English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

12 answers

Don't you just hate that? My kids had the same thing but their school ranks very high in the standardized testing. It was worth it!

2007-04-05 16:17:32 · answer #1 · answered by Elizabeth E 3 · 2 0

Have you logged on to your state's Standards from the department of education? It is the detailed goals that all teachers are being required to teach. It is volumes of material and USA's effort to catch up with other European and Asian countries which surpass us in Math, Science, English and a second language.
With large classes even in kindergarten, there is no way your child will get the same kind of education you got as a kid-

2007-04-05 17:13:10 · answer #2 · answered by atheleticman_fan 5 · 1 0

the current trend is that a k student can handle what first graders were doing a generation ago.

a packet gives them freedom to get it all done and not have homework every night of the week. It gets them into a habit of doing work and turning it in for credit without overly concerning them with grades or 10 -20 minutes of work everynight. many K-2 students will also be req to read a certain number of minutes or books (one book etc)

2007-04-05 16:18:32 · answer #3 · answered by smartass_yankee_tom 4 · 2 0

I was surprised when mine did last year too. After seeing how much he learned in Kindergarten I understood why he had homework. You also might ask the teacher if your child is working fast enough? I have a slow worker!

2007-04-05 16:18:21 · answer #4 · answered by Becky L 2 · 1 0

First, i could bypass common on the punishment for 2 motives: a million) that's unreasonable to anticipate a kindergartener to have the attention span to sit down down and do homework for a protracted volume of time, and 2) you're laying the floor artwork for him to hate college and reading, and that's a challenge because of the fact he has a minimum of 12 years left of it. it fairly is analogous to aversion therapy, in basic terms with out the therapy. he will commence associating homework with arguments, spankings or different damaging issues. Be valuable and supportive. He would desire to be sensing your impatience and negativity. Praising his artwork, on the different hand, could make doing his homework worth it to him. Have regulations that there is not any "relaxing stuff" (television, video games, outdoor play) till his homework is complete. don't be "propose" approximately it, merely state matter-of-factly that he can play after he's complete. as a replace of merely taking a wreck, exchange the area. My son splits up his homework, doing somewhat at after-college and a few at dwelling house. It makes it "new" lower back. yet heavily, that's you who needs to alter somewhat. He shouldn't could rush via his homework. he's making an attempt to check lots, and different than for the undeniable fact that dashing could decrease how lots he knows, some human beings do no longer artwork nicely under stress. it rather is particularly the case with time -- attempting to speed via it because of the fact of somebody's time constraints oftentimes is so distracting that it makes the placement worse. i comprehend it sucks, yet bear in mind that something of the mothers and dads are having to try this, like it or no longer. that's merely have been given to be executed. BTW, he has too lots, till you're exaggerating some with the three hours element. My son has a letter sheet (writes the capital and lowercase of the letter of the week, cuts out and glues the letter from a mag, and cuts and pastes photos of issues interior the magazine that commence w/ the letter.) He will additionally from time to time have somewhat artwork initiatives. And he reads somewhat analyzing e book each night. The paper/artwork homework is assigned on Monday and due on Friday. The analyzing is its very own advantages -- he loves it AND if he reads somewhat 15 days a month, Pizza Hut has a analyzing application and analyzing 15 nights a month earns him a private pan pizza.

2016-10-21 03:58:22 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Kindergarten is not about ABCs and learning left from right anymore. The general curriculum for grade school has gotten a lot harder than it was when I was in school and the kids have to prepare for it. My daughter is in 5th grade and she's already learning algebra and pi. I spoke to her math teacher once about it and asked her if it was just our school teaching that level at such a young age or all over and she said it's all over. She said she is teaching stuff to 4th and 5th graders now that she used to teach to high schoolers!

2007-04-05 16:20:32 · answer #6 · answered by Emily Dew 7 · 1 0

Children at that age learn much quicker and more easily than they will in a year or two. They are at a great time developmentally to acquire language skills- their brains are literally programed to absorb it. They also need to learn about focusing and staying on task at this age.

The attitude with which you approach your child's school work and how much you are involved in it will determine what sort of education he/she receives. Parents tend to think education is something that happens at school and that they shouldn't be burdened with it at home. Remember that your child is your responsibility. You had the child- the school is providing a service to your and your child and you need to help.

2007-04-05 16:21:53 · answer #7 · answered by blahblah 4 · 2 0

They are pushing kids to learn earlier and earlier. It's not really a bad thing as it is far easier for a young child to learn new things than it is for someone older. For example, a child taught a second language in kindergarten will generally learn it faster and remember it longer than one taught in high school.

2007-04-05 16:17:25 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

I think most schools have been trying to be "tougher" on the kids because they think it will make them smarter

Its bound to get worse... I can't remember where I read this but the average American student now has to spend way more time on his/her homework compared to how much homework time his/her parents spent when they were in school.

2007-04-05 16:19:51 · answer #9 · answered by deedumdah 2 · 2 0

Welcome to the world of
George W. That's called "No Child Left Behind"! In other worlds it's a load of crap

2007-04-05 16:21:16 · answer #10 · answered by Firebreather 5 · 2 1

fedest.com, questions and answers