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MAIN
Education
TV
vs. Homework
Some Things Never Change
The current
concern with homework having to compete with video games, computers
and TV has generated many parent and teacher discussions. This
concern is not new. Looking at the history of the debate may not
solve the problem, but it may help if we realize that many of
today's parents were part of the group this study is talking about!
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How students
occupy their time outside of school can affect their academic
performance. Since homework is a form of practice or self-directed
study, most educators feel that it improves student achievement.
Empirical
studies conducted on the subject suggest that the amount of time
spent on homework is positively related to academic achievement.
However,
statistics concerning the average number of hours spent on homework
tell us little about the quality of the homework assigned or the
effort and care students take in completing it. For many students,
homework must compete with television for their attention. If
students spend a lot of time watching television, little time
is left to focus on academic studies.
This indicator
documents how students spend their time at home through two measures
- the percentage of students who claim to do 2 hours or more of
homework daily, and the percentage of students who report watching
television one hour or less daily.
Data for these
two measures are based on the responses of 13-year-old students
in the countries and 8th-grade public school students in the states.
In 1991, 13-year-old
students in the United States did less homework each day than
their counterparts in most of the other countries for which we
have data. Only Scotland and Switzerland, of the 18 other countries
represented here, reported a lower percentage of students doing
2 hours or more of homework a day than did the United States.
In 1992, the
percentage of students indicating they do 2 or more hours of homework
daily was generally lower in the U.S. states than in the other
countries for which data were available. In twelve of 18 other
countries, more than 4 out of 10 13-year-olds reported doing that
much homework; whereas none of the 41 states had that many. The
range across the states was much more narrow than that across
the countries, with a difference of only 15 percentage points
separating Connecticut and Massachusetts (34 percent) and Iowa
(19 percent). The range across countries extended 65 percentage
points between Emilia Romagna, Italy (79 percent) and Scotland
(14 percent).
Of 18 other
countries reporting data, only Scotland had a higher proportion
of students report watching 2 hours or more of TV daily than did
the United States. The percentage for China (35 percent), the
country with the lowest percentage of students who watched television
2 hours or more daily, was 49 percentage points lower than that
of the United States (84 percent).
On the whole,
a higher proportion of students in the U.S. states watched television
for 2 hours or more daily than did students in other countries
reporting data. Twelve countries, but only three states, had percentages
lower than 80. The range across the countries was much wider than
that across the states. The countries reported a range of 55 percentage
points, while the states showed a difference of only 18 percentage
points between the states with the lowest (Utah) and highest (Alabama,
Mississippi, Louisiana, and Arkansas) percentages.
Source:
Education in States and Nations: 1991
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