Google

21 August 2006

ollie, ollie, oxen free


They are all outside in the front playing soccer (sometimes degenerating to "sock-em"--Six just came in crying having taken a random and verifiably accidental shot to the eye). I love the sound of a bunch of kids playing after school. It brings me back to the days when we'd slam into the house and yell "hi!" and then immediately slam back out to go "calling on" kids til we'd gathered enough warm bodies for a good game of kickball. Followed by Red Light Green Light. Followed by Freeze Tag. Followed by moms calling our names out the back doors because dinner was ready.

Yes, that really was my actual childhood.

Kids have a different kind of childhood now. Kickball is now an organized after school activity. So is soccer. I have yet to hear of a Freeze Tag League, but I won't be surprised when I do. Between parental work days, cultural paranoia about stranger-danger, and--oh, the horror, the horror--homework (kindergarteners have homework; homework is a pox, a pox I tell you!), kids don't have neighborhood lives anymore. At least not where we live.

And it's a terrible loss. Sometimes when the light is just right, at dusk, a wave of warm memory washes over me--the sounds of moms calling, kids pleading for a little more time (that's not changed, anyway), the slight chill of evening, the scent of dinner wafting out to meet you on the back stairs.

I want so much for my kids to have something like that as a foundation, a set of memories of childhood that will catch them at unexpected moments as they are pulling into their driveways after work or calling their kids to the dinner table.

So I make a choice. At times I, well, I, um, fudge the homework tracking spyware sent home in their backpacks, the dread sign-off sheets designed to make me narc my kids for not reading the district-mandated 13.67 minutes per night.

Please don't tell on me. My permanent record can't use it, trust me.

I know they have to learn stuff. I do. And I believe the teachers when they tell me that they don't have time during the school day to teach my 3rd grader the multiplication tables (which is why Four's teacher wants the parents to teach them at home). I know that they have to push, pull, and drag their students over, under, or through an increasingly dizzying array of official educational "benchmarks."

But, still, I want my kids to have childhoods something like the one I had.

And they do. They come home, say hi, dump their stuff, and troop out. They have the same baroquely complex ways of choosing teams and deciding who gets "first ups" that we did. Though they start with soccer, not kickball, they do move on to Red Light Green Light and then to Freeze Tag. There just aren't any other kids out there with them, usually. I think the homework mafia has the other parents scared out of their socks. What if, due to Freeze Tag, their child ends up missing one of his math facts causing him to score too low on his college boards to get into the College of His Choice and so he ends up competing for a call center job that gets out-sourced to another continent and he has to live under a bridge?

The reason I can rattle that off so glibly is because that train of thought roars into my station too, all too often, even though I've read the research, even. The truth is that homework in elementary school has no positive effect on future academic performance. The only effect it can have is negative (burnout).

Parental anxiety can trick us into thinking that piling homework on second graders is a good thing, or maybe just a necessary evil.

But really, honestly, guys: the homework that is eating up your kid's time and your family's peace is neither good nor necessary. The school has my kids for seven hours a day during the week. I get them for an hour or so in the morning ("Mom, MOM! Five is sucking on my hairbrush!"), and maybe 3.5 or 4 hours after school. I am convinced that their futures will be better for their spending an hour or two of that time running and shouting and playing and fighting and negotiating what the next game will be.

I don't want to make them do their homework. I don't want to help them do it either. I did my time in elementary school.

I was such a good girl when I was in school, and now look at me--homework scofflaw! What's next?

Hmmm. Maybe a backpack full of homework back then would have kept me from becoming the evil homework-signoff-sheet-prevaricator that I have become in my dotage.

I'll have to give that some thought.

[think think think]

Nah.

Comments:
Mom, MOM!

Are you published somewhere (besides the blogosphere?). For real? For PAY?

Cuz you should be. Truly.

Another piece of brilliance, in my humble, tax-funded, government-agency-employed opinion.

You won't blow *my* cover, will you?

Oh wait. Ya can't. Anonymous post-er.

Keep up the good work, Mom, MOM!

T
 
But it is only the blogosphere where I am sure of finding such intelligent perceptive briliant readers whose covers I would never for a nanosecond think of blowing! Even if they weren't anonymous!

Thank you. This comment made my day.
 
Hallelujah! It's good to know I'm not the only homework fudging mom out there. I truly believe homework for the K-3 set is ridiculous. Maybe that's why I ended up homeschooling most of them at that age.....

And I too miss the neighborhood nights. Red Rover and Red Light Green Light were the big games in my neighborhood. Living in a neighborhood with 25 kids is conducive to that--that's where I grew up. Living in a neighborhood where the only children are your siblings--not so much fun. And our poor toddler! He's gonna be so alone pretty soon. We're praying for the $$ for a "partner in crime" for him.

Thanks for the memories!!!
 
Mom, MOM!
This post brought back so many good memories! I was rarely in my home after school and can still hear the sound of all the moms calling us in at dinner time. Those were the days!

I also sign off on homework that wasn't done. I also "gasp" help more than I should sometimes with homework. I don't need them going into a tailspin over homework - they have enough in their past to help them with that!!

Colleen
 
I am just glad to read that your kids are still playing in the front yard, after your previous post!!

I so agree with the homework business - the whole performance anxiety (the parents not the kids) makes me crazy - a friends little boy made honor role - in kindergarten!!! I'm sorry - honor role for what!!??!! Even she was embarrassed when she told me.

Everyone just needs to take a deep breath and relax.
 
I weighed my middle son's (9 years old and 48 lbs dripping wet) backpack this morning. It weighed in at over 16 lbs. because of the math and science books and language homework and papers to be filled out and blah blah blah.

He's already read all the Harry Potter books at least three times. Does he really need to do 3 hours worth of homework to know the difference between a period and a question mark at the end of a sentence?

It's all too much and it's wrong and I wish that school authorities would pay attention to us and change it.
 
You are so right--it's absolutely scandalous.

You know, it is high time for a parental revolution. NO ONE I have talked to about this sees the current homework mania as reasonable, healthy, or educational. No one. And there's NO research to support the current maniacal practice.

So whose idea IS this anyway???? We have to stop it.

16 lbs--my gosh. That reminds me of the old Tennessee Ernie Ford song; maybe we should rewrite the lyrics and sing it at protest meetings: "You load 17 lbs, what do you get? / Another day older and not caught up yet! / St. Peter don't ya call me cuz I can't go / I owe my soul to the ho-o-mework drawer!"

or some such.
 
OOPS. I meant "You load 16 lbs...."

Maybe I DIDN'T have enough math homework...
snort.
 
ahh ... so i am NOT THE ONLY MOM to ... uh ... "enhance" the reading sign off sheet (little so- and-so read 20 minutes tonight! NOT!! REALITY: so-and-so had a discussion with his dad about the wonders of electricity or some such, then went and played with the kids down the street for an hour ... then had dinner ... storytime ... a little homework ... then bed!)Notice the appellation "a little homework" ... we get what we can done (or rather ... I make sure they get what they can done)but i dont stress about it much! And at least in past years, they still come home with very good grades!

i too remember the halcyon days of yor ... with nearly IDENTICAL details to your story of life as a kid! Now-a-days ... my 46 pounder comes home carrying a 20 pound backpack stocked with 2-3 hours of homework, on a regular basis ... and my 2nd grader comes home consistently with a couple hours worth nightly, as well! And of course, as often as not parents have "homework" from the teacher as well ... fill this out, sign that, practice this with so-and-so for his test tomorrow! So ... I fudge here and there while i keep track of whether they are really learning. At times when they have trouble ... we crack down on the homework a bit ... but only until the concept is learned! Our schools insist on teaching kids the same thing over and over again ... my philosophy ... once you've learned something, you should be able to continue!

Anyway ... thanks for a refreshing post ... i got to indulge in my childhood a bit ... and expend my own frustrated energy on someone who totally understands! THANKS!
http://florida-wild-life.blogspot.com/ (our own take on life!)
 
In my state, obesity is a BIG (no pun intended) concern. They've taken colas out of the vending machines. They do BMI analysis of each kid. Perhaps they should clue in to the equation and realize that you have to EXPEND energy not simply limit how much food you consume to maintain a healthy weight. Having our kids sit in front of a desk all day then come home to sit in front of a desk at night to do homework isn't going to solve the obesity equation.
 
So very very true! That makes a second good reason to let our kids be kids after school. Thanks for this response!
 
Post a Comment



<< Home

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?