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Primary education

Year 2 - can school say homework is compulsory?

87 replies

Redcliff · 14/03/2014 17:15

I mentioned to one of the other mums at school today that I heard our sons teacher had been keeping children in a break time to finish homework if it hadn't been done and she went a bit crazy - turns out that she never does homework with her kids and when she asked her son today (after I opened my big mouth) he said that he had been kept in for the last two weeks for at least one break time.

She told him they couldn't do this - is this right?

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Littlefish · 14/03/2014 17:26

No, she's not right.

Each school sets its own homework policy, in the same way that it sets its own behaviour policy.

Whilst I don't think it's great to keep children in at playtime, and certainly not something I would do, if the school says that homework is compulsory, then it can also set sanctions if the homework is not completed.

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tiggytape · 14/03/2014 18:52

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Glasshammer · 14/03/2014 19:52

I would be very unhappy if my DS and I had decided not to do homework and the school forced the issue. He's only 7, so very young. I would ha e strong words with the teacher and highlight your decision and request they respect it

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Redcliff · 14/03/2014 21:16

See where your coming from glass but I guess it makes sense for the school to set rules. When she told her son that they weren't allowed to keep him in I did interject with "maybe you (mum) could talk to the teacher - her son is a real sweetie and I couldn't bear the thought of him getting into trouble. I think she feels she hasn't got time or the desire to do the homework.

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Littlefish · 14/03/2014 22:15

You're absolutely right that the mum should speak to the teacher rather than support and encourage her child to flout the school rules.

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AICM · 14/03/2014 22:26

There is no law that says children must be set homework. However there are government recommendations.

The issue here is very, very simple. Each school will have a homework policy, children must do homework in line with the policy or take the consequences in line with the policy. Parents are completely free to look for a school with a homework policy of their liking or to home-educate.

As a teacher a would make a stand enforcing this out of fairness to the whole class.

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tiptabletops · 14/03/2014 22:35

"Parents are completely free to look for a school with a homework policy of their liking"

as free as 0.2 catchment areas allow.

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tiggytape · 14/03/2014 23:04

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Heifer · 14/03/2014 23:13

I would have expected the teacher to have spoken to the parent if the boy had missed so much homework rather than just keeping him in at play/lunchtime.

My DD school has been set homework Mon-Thur (due back the next day) since yr 2, it's something that you just get used to and get on with it.. Think it was just 10 mins a day in yr 2, working up to 30 mins now in Yr 5 + reading & spellings on top.

If a child doesn't finish their homework without good reason (usually because they forgot to take it home with them) then the teacher does keep them in (yr 5) but I've asked if DD could be allowed to do the occasional piece at the weekend if she's had a sports match after school followed by a club, and was told that was fine so there is some flexibility.

Personally I'm all for homework if it helps my DD progress. She doesn't seem to mind as it's something she is used to and am hoping that the transition into secondary school will be easier.

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Glasshammer · 14/03/2014 23:28

Thankfully my sons school listens to parents and is able to differentiate in regards to completing homework. The kids are generally v bright and the homework doesn't achieve much really.

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steppemum · 14/03/2014 23:29

actually tiggy, I thought that at primary they couldn't enforce uniform?

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PanelChair · 14/03/2014 23:36

It is often said on MN that school uniform can't be enforced at primary school, but that simply isn't true. As Tiggytape says, primary schools can adopt a uniform policy and can enforce it. The difference is in the range of sanctions open to them; unlike secondary schools, they cannot exclude pupils for not wearing uniform (although I gave seen differing opinions even on this point).

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tiggytape · 14/03/2014 23:56

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prh47bridge · 15/03/2014 00:23

I'm not going to quote the relevant law again but the basics are that a school can make pretty much any rules it wants within reason to in order to regulate the behaviour of pupils (which includes wearing uniform, doing homework, etc.) and can enforce those rules provided it has a clear policy and follows it.

Regarding exclusions for uniform in primary schools, it used to be the case that DfE guidance said a pupil should only be excluded for regularly and defiantly breaching uniform rules. That was unlikely at primary school. The latest guidance simply says that any exclusion must be in line with legal requirements. My take is that this theoretically means a primary school pupil could be excluded for breaches of uniform regulations, but personally I think that would be inappropriate.

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ComeIntoTheGardenMaud · 15/03/2014 00:26

Thank you, prh47bridge. That is what I was grasping for.

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wannabestressfree · 15/03/2014 00:32

At the school I teach at the deputy head calls the parent and reminds them of thd contract they signed eg uniform, homework detentions. He also reminds them if they don't like it they can move them elsewhere....

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AbbyR1973 · 15/03/2014 08:48

Actually I think the Mum is in the wrong here.
If she has a fundamental disagreement with homework in principle she should be discussing her views directly with the school not be leaving it to her son.
Lack of time is a bit pathetic. I'm a single parent that works fulltime in a professional occupation including on-call hours nights and weekend. I am still able to find time to hear DS's read at least 5 times a week, supervise violin practise, read bedtime stories to each DS AND supervise homework at weekends.
Unless the amount of homework set is excessive then most people have plenty of time. DS in year 1 has maths, literacy and spellings given out on Friday to be handed in by Thursday. Literacy is usually a comprehension sheet, maths a worksheet related to class work. The maths sheet usually takes him less than 5 mins to complete, the comprehension sheet maybe 10 mins max.

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tiptabletops · 15/03/2014 08:50

Can I ask if schools can also ban packed lunches? This has happened at our school this term, because the school wants a bigger take up of school dinners which are cooked on site (makes it more economical for the school, but also nominally in support of 'healthy eating', although the school dinners are far less healthy than the food my son used to eat in his lunch box).

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Littlefish · 15/03/2014 09:42

Tiptabletops - yes, I think they can.

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Redcliff · 15/03/2014 18:57

Thanks for all the feedback - I thought that would be the case. I don't know why the teacher hasn't spoken to the mum - there are some very challenging children in the class (1 spat in my sons hair last week) and as the "non-homework" boy is fairly well behaved maybe it just slipped under the rader.

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Bilberry · 16/03/2014 17:06

In Scotland you actually can't enforce school uniform (at least at primary level). This came up in Parent Council as part of an extensive discussion about length of skirts....

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morethanpotatoprints · 16/03/2014 17:13

No, they can't make it compulsory, nor can they punish your child for not doing it, unless you signed the home/school agreement.
We had this at my ds schools and it took several stern letters and threat of further action before they stopped suggesting they did detention. I even went into school to take them out of one once.
Fair enough, if you agree that is fine, if you sign consent its fine.

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wannabestressfree · 16/03/2014 17:22

I just don't understand why you wouldn't work alongside your child's school and actually go in and remove them..... What message does that send?

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morethanpotatoprints · 16/03/2014 17:26

wannabe

It says stand by your convictions and don't be a sheep for the sake of following others.
There is no benefit to homework at this age, they were at school all day and my opinion is they had enough time to teach.

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tiggytape · 16/03/2014 17:27

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