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Debate Info

13
11
Helpful Harmful
Debate Score:24
Arguments:20
Total Votes:31
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Argument Ratio

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 Helpful (11)
 
 Harmful (9)

Debate Creator

YousefMarwan(18) pic



Is homework helpful or harmful ?

The majority of teachers use homework for exersice and take more question doing at home to dodge the class time teaching , As student think that the teacher who hate the student he give them homework so he can make their marks down.I believe that homework makes the student open the books and memoriez the lesson at home so it in the benifts if the studen .What is you opinion ?

Helpful

Side Score: 13
VS.

Harmful

Side Score: 11

It isn't harmfull of course because it makes the student revise what he learned in school and to remember and check out the new ideas that the teacher thought them

Side: Helpful

i agree with you mustafa ,its practicing and memorizing what we had in school.It's also understanding what you didn't understand in the class.

Side: Helpful

I hate my homework, but I will admit it is helpful. But we go by proficiency grading. Homework is not required, yet they still give it to us. They wouldn't give us it if it wasn't helpful. It makes us think about it and put our knowledge to use that way we are more prepared for tests.

Side: Helpful
1 point

It is helpful because it is a way to revise what you've take and a way to practice your informations.

Side: Helpful
0 points

I think that it can increase students marks, and it makes them practice for tests.

Side: Helpful
0 points

Sometimes, I feel as if I have been doing homework my entire life. As a child growing up, I moved from worksheets, dioramas and book reports to essays, major projects and term papers. When I began teaching, I had lessons to prepare and my students’ homework became my homework for grading. (And, on occasion, it was quite obvious that I was putting a bit more effort into MY homework than they put into theirs!) As my children reached school age, “Mom’s rules” on homework included: homework comes first, don’t wait until the last minute on a project, etc. But somehow their homework still bled over into my life…

So, how important is this icon of education? Is homework helpful or harmful? Is it something that, as many students claim, just eats up their time and energy for no real purpose? Do we, as educators, need new practices that move away from homework or are we simply afraid to change, stuck on those famous eight words, “But, we’ve never done it that way before…”?

In support of the view of homework as helpful, many educators stress that specifically aligning homework to the learning task is part of the strategy for building understanding. The website Focus on Effectiveness cites several studies showing that in elementary school, homework helps build learning and study habits (Cooper, 1989; Cooper, Lindsay, Nye, & Greathouse, 1998; Gorges & Elliot, 1999). Also noted is the point that 30 minutes of daily homework in high school can increase a student’s GPA up to half a point (Keith 1992). Many students need time and experience to develop the study habits that support learning, and homework can provide that as well as the ability to cope with mistakes and difficulty (Bempechat, 2004). Those teachers who take the time to add instructive comments to their feedback to homework get the greatest return on their efforts in after-school work. (Walberg, 1999).

But what about the students who are doing it wrong and then have to “unlearn” incorrect information? When considering the view that homework is harmful, author and speaker Alfie Kohn states that there is no real evidence showing homework to be beneficial to elementary students. In an EdWeek article, he writes that he found no correlation between homework and improved standardized assessment scores. Regarding secondary students, Kohn said that there is a slight correlation between homework and improved test scores and grades but there is no evidence that the improvement is because of homework rather than other activities. Stating that there is no proof that homework benefits students in other ways such as good study habits, independence or self discipline, Kohn could find no disadvantage to reducing or even eliminating homework altogether but finds the homework trend continues to grow.

So, what is the answer – is homework helpful or harmful? Do we continue current practices or throw homework out altogether?

A balanced perspective most likely is the best response. Time spent on homework should align with the student’s age – a short time spent in elementary school, up to 90 minutes for middle school or junior high aged students and between 1½ and 2 ½ hours per night (not per subject!) in high school (Harris, 2006). Another suggestion is to multiply the student’s grade by ten to determine the appropriate number of minutes of homework per night (example – a fifth grader should have no more than 50 minutes of homework per night). If we want the best results, we’ll keep homework time within these time ranges with allowances made for individual needs of students and families.

Key takeaways:

Remember the main purposes of homework: to build rote memorization and automaticity; to provide time to deepen understanding though elaboration and to increase readiness for new information.

Assign homework that includes very few concepts so students can learn them on a deeper level (Healy, 1990).

Match homework to the learning goal for a more focused learning experience.

Provide appropriate and timely feedback. Students need to know what was correct, what needs to be changed, etc., and they need this information sooner rather than later. Waiting several days or even weeks to provide feedback limits or even eliminates the effectiveness of the assignment.

Parental involvement should be limited to facilitating the completion of homework – not teaching content or doing the work for a child. Parents who get too involved in an assignment inhibit rather than enhance learning.

Side: Helpful
0 points

In my opinion , I think it is correct that homework is helpful because you practice and memorise the information .......

Side: Helpful
0 points

Depends on the time betwen leassons. If I have physic monday and wednesday, then I will give them a small amount of homework to be done betwen from wednesday to monday, so they don’t forget to much. It will be a small amount. Something they can finish in 10-15 minuts.

Supporting Evidence: happy wheels (happywheels2.io)
Side: Helpful
3 points

Sometimes it'd be harmful when you have an exam the next day and if there was a deadline date but you had an emergency that day , the teacher wont believe you

Side: Harmful
Nox0(1393) Disputed
1 point

No, that's just bad time management .

Side: Helpful

we spend more than 7 hours in the school and 7 hours for sleeping and 3 hours for eating and drinking and having a shower that's mean we just have 7 hours to practise our life activity and visit our friends and family and to set with our families !!

studying is not every thing in this life dude !

Side: Harmful
Atrag(5666) Disputed
1 point

I wish I had 7 hours a day just to do nothing.. .

Side: Helpful
Gloria(135) Disputed
1 point

7 hours to practice your "life activity" and visit your friends is more than enough. 7 hours of freetime is more than you need.

Studying is not everything, of course, but this argument doesn't make any sense. You got plenty of time to "practice your life activity", homework can blend very well into that.

And I don't think anyone would consider you wanting to spend more time with friends a good reason not to give homework. Responsibilities and obligations trump fun.

Side: Helpful
1 point

I really hate HOMEWORK a lot. I never like it.. NEVER FOREVER!!

Side: Harmful

In my opinion homework is wasting time , cause we spend more than 6hours at school so why should we have homework with all this time we in school.Also the student need time to do their Co-operative in the comunity, And we need time to spent in our hobbits.

Side: Harmful
1 point

Harmful. School work should be done at school to make sure it's done properly with the guidance of a teacher. At home, children can copy homework easily, half-ass it and basically it just takes away time from them to do something else yet it's completely unproductive. It's a way for teachers to avoid more work, because if the students did it in school, they'd have to help them and cooperate, but if they just make them do it at home, they only grade it and nothing more. It's simply going against the point of teachers - kids can do stuff alone and get it graded even if there were no teachers... Teachers are there to guide them and help them while learning. Not just give them homework and do nothing but grade it.

Side: Harmful

( It's a way for teachers to avoid more work, because if the students did it in school, they'd have to help them and cooperate, but if they just make them do it at home, they only grade it and nothing more. It's simply going against the point of teachers) i agree with this point

Side: Harmful
1 point

20 % of homework is helpful but 80% of I is harmful

Teachers should give some homework so we can practice what we learn and reinforce it, but they have to realize that we have other classes and priorities of which time needs to be spent on as well. Furthermore, too much homework and a heavy load of assignments and upcoming tests deprive students of well needed eight hours of sleep, therefore making it harder for us to retain the information we learn, and in the end making homework a time consuming struggle.

that is my opinion about 80% of harmful homework

Side: Harmful

if you ask the teacher why you give us homework he will said its for practice and memorizing lessons at home but the true is that the teachers cant finish all the question and lesson in time thats why he give us the rest at home.

Side: Harmful
1 point

it is can be harmful cause if student cant understand the topic in class so he will try to understand but he couldnt so we have a lot of real exampels like when the parrents killed their children cause they cant understand the topic

Side: Harmful