A couple nights ago, all my friends seemed to be posting to
Facebook about their kids’ homework. One was working with their 3
rd grader, another with their 1
st grader, and another commenting that those two should “just wait until you get to 5
th grade math.”
And I thought to myself: This is ridiculous.
Despite the fact that there are
NO CONCLUSIVE STUDIES that homework in elementary school has any impact on academic achievement later on, teachers continue to pile it on. They say it’s teaching children discipline (which all know is a crock – it’s teaching the parents discipline. How many 2
nd graders do you know that would do their homework without being harped on?)
I think in some ways things have just flip-flopped. From the 1930s to the 1970s children used the
Dick and Jane books to learn to read. In those books, adults worked and children played. Today, children work and adults play.
Seriously, in addition to the pressure to make sure kids are toiling away at their homework every night, there seems to be more and more pressure on parents to keep their children entertained (when they're not doing homework), which results in adults having to play games, Barbies, Wii, etc. I love spending time with my kids – but does it really have to be playing playdough? Isn’t that something they can do independently?
I found a blog called
Free Range Kids that is great. It discusses giving our kids childhoods like the ones we had. I wish more people held this opinion.
Do you ever...
..let your kid ride a bike to the library? Walk alone to school? Take a bus, solo? Or are you thinking about it? If so, you are raising a Free Range Kid! At Free Range, we believe in safe kids. We believe in helmets, car seats and safety belts. We do NOT believe that every time school age children go outside, they need a security detail. Most of us grew up Free Range and lived to tell the tale. Our kids deserve no less. This site dedicated to sane parenting. Share your stories, tell your tips and maybe one day I will try to collect them in a book. Meantime, let's try to help our kids embrace life! (And maybe even clear the table.)