Homework Policy and Student Choice: Findings from a Montessori Charter School

The use of homework has been a controversial topic in education for many years: what types of homework to give, how much, and how often. In previous years, Ocean Montessori School (a pseudonym), the site of this study, offered homework like that of traditional public schools, such as worksheets and...

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Main Authors: Catherine M Scott, Nelda Glaze
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Kansas 2017-11-01
Series:Journal of Montessori Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.ku.edu/jmr/article/view/6585
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spelling doaj-f06391b53a184db1854b2b1283107d0b2020-11-24T21:40:51ZengUniversity of KansasJournal of Montessori Research2378-39232017-11-013211810.17161/jomr.v3i2.65855870Homework Policy and Student Choice: Findings from a Montessori Charter SchoolCatherine M Scott0Nelda Glaze1Coastal Carolina UniversityCoastal Carolina UniversityThe use of homework has been a controversial topic in education for many years: what types of homework to give, how much, and how often. In previous years, Ocean Montessori School (a pseudonym), the site of this study, offered homework like that of traditional public schools, such as worksheets and rote skill practice. Feeling conflicted about the misalignment between traditional homework and Montessori practices, the school administration changed the homework policy for the 2016–2017 academic year. The new policy encouraged students to choose what they wanted to do each night for homework. This study examines the views and practices of the teachers, students, and parents involved in the new homework policy. Data were collected from parent surveys, teacher focus groups, student interviews, observations, and student work samples. The findings indicate that, although students enjoyed the proposed homework change, it lacked sufficient structure for parents, and students needed support from teachers and parents to engage in meaningful homework tasks.https://journals.ku.edu/jmr/article/view/6585charter, elementary, homework, Montessori
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Catherine M Scott
Nelda Glaze
spellingShingle Catherine M Scott
Nelda Glaze
Homework Policy and Student Choice: Findings from a Montessori Charter School
Journal of Montessori Research
charter, elementary, homework, Montessori
author_facet Catherine M Scott
Nelda Glaze
author_sort Catherine M Scott
title Homework Policy and Student Choice: Findings from a Montessori Charter School
title_short Homework Policy and Student Choice: Findings from a Montessori Charter School
title_full Homework Policy and Student Choice: Findings from a Montessori Charter School
title_fullStr Homework Policy and Student Choice: Findings from a Montessori Charter School
title_full_unstemmed Homework Policy and Student Choice: Findings from a Montessori Charter School
title_sort homework policy and student choice: findings from a montessori charter school
publisher University of Kansas
series Journal of Montessori Research
issn 2378-3923
publishDate 2017-11-01
description The use of homework has been a controversial topic in education for many years: what types of homework to give, how much, and how often. In previous years, Ocean Montessori School (a pseudonym), the site of this study, offered homework like that of traditional public schools, such as worksheets and rote skill practice. Feeling conflicted about the misalignment between traditional homework and Montessori practices, the school administration changed the homework policy for the 2016–2017 academic year. The new policy encouraged students to choose what they wanted to do each night for homework. This study examines the views and practices of the teachers, students, and parents involved in the new homework policy. Data were collected from parent surveys, teacher focus groups, student interviews, observations, and student work samples. The findings indicate that, although students enjoyed the proposed homework change, it lacked sufficient structure for parents, and students needed support from teachers and parents to engage in meaningful homework tasks.
topic charter, elementary, homework, Montessori
url https://journals.ku.edu/jmr/article/view/6585
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