Should the U.S. Follow France’s Lead and End Homework?

According to Louis Menand, France is the place to go if you don’t enjoy doing your homework:121217_r22945illu_p233

Here is something you probably didn’t know about France: its President has the power to abolish homework. In a recent speech at the Sorbonne, François Hollande announced his intention to do this for all primary- and middle-school students.

Does that mean we should follow President François Hollande’s lead? Not so fast:

According to the leading authority in the field, Harris Cooper, of Duke University, homework correlates positively—although the effect is not large—with success in school. Professor Cooper says that this is more true in middle school and high school than in primary school, since younger children get distracted more easily. He also thinks that there is such a thing as homework overload—he recommends no more than ten minutes per grade a night. But his conclusion that homework matters is based on a synthesis of forty years’ worth of research.

So keep writing those essays!

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