University of Southern Queensland

Homework:  what we could do to make it better for students, teachers and parents

There have long been debates over homework and children’s resistance to doing it. It is seen to lead to fights at the kitchen table after school. This may stem from time-poor working families or parents and carers unsure of how to do it in the ‘right’ way.

 As teachers, and parents, we too have struggled with homework. We decided to research this further. Homework is widely used in primary school. There is also a continuing  debate in the media. But  there is a limited body of research to explain the purpose, evidence for the practice or explanation of the power dynamics which underpin current homework approaches.

Homework doesn’t always lead to increased learning

Homework is generally given to revise learning concepts taught within the classroom.  But studies have shown homework does not always add to increased learning and could, in fact,  have the opposite effect. Teachers have reported that designing quality tasks, along with marking homework was time-consuming. It also proved difficult to meet the needs of the diverse students in their classes. Don’t we know it! Similarly, parents have shared concerns detailing the pressure of homework and how its expectations can create tensions within the home. 

Since current practices are not working, what if the purpose of homework was to help children and their parents enjoy and engage in learning together, rather than purely consolidate learning and preparing for the next test? 

Grej of the Day

We found a case study which offers a potential alternative to homework, all the way from Sweden. ‘Grej of the Day’ is an approach to homework that seeks to connect learning between school and home. Mikael Hermansson, teacher of the year in Sweden 2015, may have an idea here that works! 

When using Grej of the Day in the classroom, children are given a clue (for example a giraffe playing a tuba below) to guess what it is about. Children take the clue home to discuss with their families then bring ideas back to school the next day. The class learns from all the ideas shared then have an 8-minute micro lesson from the teacher, who shares one WOW fact. For each topic a pin is put on a world map to show where it was from. Homework is then for children to retell what they learnt to their parents.

We saw this innovative approach, thought about the diverse learners we see in the classrooms, and wondered how it could support children in Australia. 

What we found

We conducted an international online survey, which received 2025 responses from 16 countries. 240 teachers gave us further details as to how and why they use ‘Grej of the Day’ in their classrooms. Our initial analysis shows teachers reported mostly positive changes in the classroom to children’s behaviour and engagement in learning. Fewer parents reported a lack of interest.  

We found three main benefits to using Grej of the Day:

  1. Cultural appropriateness: Potential to engage children from diverse backgrounds in meaningful ways inclusive of their home languages, time, skills and knowledge to learn new things beyond a narrow curriculum. Teachers have discussed that they can ‘use Grejs to cross bridges, to understand each other better, to learn about other religions, values, points of view and customs’.
  2. High engagement: Children were excited to participate in their learning and do homework. A huge step if you have a child who hated school! Micael Hermannson saw this in his own class where he found he was able to take a difficult group of children, who he could not reach, to being the class of the year in Sweden. Suddenly children wanted to be at school and learn. One teacher highlighted this ‘GoTD can absolutely be a way to support the [sic] diversity. I remember this student who really had a hard time at school and suddenly he said, ‘Now I know more than my mum, I think I`m going to become a teacher…’.
  3. Authentic learning: When discussing the impact GoTD has had to support authentic conversations to add to and build on the learning in school with families, teachers explained that parents suddenly became keen about homework, ‘There is a high participation. I have had parents waiting outside the classroom to find out whether they had solved the riddle’.

A way forward?

We are excited to present this case study as a potential paradoxical way forward that is authentic and enjoyed by children, teachers, and parents alike. Possibly it is a way that we can all enjoy homework and harness its true potential? The results from our case study pose the question to teachers and policy makers. Is it time for us to rethink homework in schools to make it an equitable playing field that values diverse funds of knowledge, ideas, and ways of learning?

Have you considered an answer to our Grej of the Day clue yet? What does the giraffe have in common with a tuba?

Monique Mandarakas (left) is a casual lecturer at the University of Southern Queensland. She has a background from both early childhood and primary teaching. Her research includes parent and family engagement in education and the support of pre-service teachers. This research is supported by her current PhD study. Melissa Fanshawe is an associate professor in the School of Education at the University of Southern Queensland. She has over twenty-five years experience within Queensland schools as a teacher, deputy and principal. She is a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and has won several teaching awards.

What happens when the science of reading fails

Yes! There’s the science of reading but there’s also the art of reading, here’s why we need both. 

Reading is a complex task and one necessary for success in life. It involves an understanding of how printed texts include letters that make certain sounds and combinations of letters to join these sounds to make words. The ultimate goal of reading is to comprehend the meaning of a string of words so that you can learn about different topics and/or enjoy stories. 

But many students find learning to read difficult. And reasons for this vary greatly. Some research says certain incidents such as trauma might affect brain development. Also, some brains may be atypical and therefore need different ways to help them work. But it may not just be cognitive impairments that impact on children’s reading ability

Understandably, a number of opinions and approaches are offered in the research literature regarding the most effective approach to teaching reading, some controversial. Many note different competencies needed for fluent reading including constrained and unconstrained skills. In addition, many commercial programs that are not evidence-based have been developed to address student learning needs in reading. 

Given reading is so vital to success in life it is critical we support students who find reading hard. Such a concern is a focus for many governments and it often becomes personal because people want what is best for children. I hope that this blog can help people understand there are two (if not more) ways of thinking about supporting readers. That is from both a science of reading approach AND an art of reading philosophy.

The science of reading

The science of reading (SoR) represents “best practices for reading instruction” identified through scientific methods. SoR explores what the brain does when we read. Known as neuroscience, evidence suggests that several cognitive processes are required for competent readers. When these processes go wrong researchers in the science of reading offer different strategies that teachers can use to help their students.

In my research with expert speech pathologists, we offered a manualised approach involving intense intervention for students based on the Simple View of Reading or SVR. The SVR involves two parts to being able to read fluently. These are word recognition and language comprehension. Word recognition involves being able to decode printed words on the page and language comprehension is how we make meaning from a group of words.

Another approach is to use decodable readers. Decodable readers are books that slowly introduce specific letters and sounds, that is, each book covers a grapheme-phoneme combination such as at, ow or ai. They are often repetitive, ensuring the child can learn these combinations in early reading programs.

But what happens when even these approaches fail children? I believe some interventions that stem from cognitive science do help struggling readers but we also need to inject special care, compassion and perhaps more emotive approaches to support what might be impacting students’ ability to read. This is why the art of reading is equally important.  

The art of reading

Do you remember your favourite book as a child? It may have been one you read yourself or one read to you. What was it about the book that attracted you? The art of reading refers to the pleasure you feel when reading books or “celebrating your power to turn shapes on a page into a lifelong adventure”.

According to the OECD, reading for pleasure or enjoyment is “an important prerequisite to becoming an effective learner” and continues to influence adult motivation and skill. Many authors skillfully write books using literary devices that can also spark our imagination. In fact, books can take us to many places, help us become better citizens, and extend our knowledge across different topics.

If reading is difficult, there are still many ways that we can help children ‘access’ books and stories such as being read to. Mem Fox, a world renowned Australian Children’s book author has a wonderful website explaining how to read aloud to children. She notes that reading aloud can foster an “essential enchanting engagement with books, stories, rhymes and songs”. 

Storytelling is also an important part of learning to read. For many cultures, learning comes first through oral language and much research has explored the connection between oral language and early reading success. Stories enable cultural continuity and heritage and are a powerful way to share knowledge. Therefore, the art of reading acknowledges that the reading process can be both social and cultural.

The art of reading is a philosophy that sees the beauty in texts. It is a process that should be enjoyed. It relates to the literary prowess of the written word and how they engage and inspire us to be better people. Certainly, the Australian Curriculum espouses that learning English “ helps create confident communicators, imaginative thinkers and informed citizens. It is through the study of English that individuals learn to analyse, understand, communicate and build relationships with others and with the world around them”.

If our own curriculum and others around the world acknowledge the beauty and power in being able to read, then why are we still saying one approach is better over others?

Perhaps it comes down to people’s own personal philosophies in life and how we view success. Yes, reading is critical to post-schooling success, without adequate reading skills we limit the ways in which we can communicate with others. We also limit our capacity to be employed. But being successful is not just about earning potential but also how we relate to others and what we can contribute back to society.

It is ok to agree to disagree. Ultimately, we all want the best for every child so for me, it’s like tacos – why don’t we have both! “Porque no los dos?” Because if we don’t we might have fluent readers but we won’t have readers who see the beauty and joy in life.

Georgina Barton is a professor in the School of Education at the University of Southern Queensland, Australia. At USQ, She is the discipline lead for literacy and pedagogy.