THIS ISSUE: Strategies
for homework completion by disabled students
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In this issue of the Promising
Practices Forum we have been asked to identify strategies for homework
completion by disabled students. This easy to use guide not only
helps with motivation and completion ideas for disabled students, but for
all children.
National Website of Importance
- The Children's
Defense Fund is an advocacy organization for children, especially poor and
minority children and those with disabilities. Its web site is filled with
information, especially relating to issues of concern for people with low
incomes.
http://www.childrensdefense
.org/
Promising Practice Research and
Tips
Successful Homework
Strategies for Disabled Students
Homework is one aspect of the general
education curriculum that has been widely recognized as important to
academic success. Teachers have long used homework to provide additional
learning time, strengthen study and organizational skills, and in some
respects, keep parents informed of their children's progress. Generally,
when students with disabilities participate in the general education
curriculum, they are expected to complete homework along with their peers.
But, just as students with disabilities may need instructional
accommodations in the classroom, they may also need homework accommodations.
Many students with disabilities find homework
challenging, and teachers are frequently called upon to make accommodations
for these students. What research supports this practice? This digest
describes five strategies that researchers have identified to improve
homework results for students with disabilities.
Strategy 1. Give Clear and
Appropriate Assignments
Teachers need to take special care when
assigning homework. If the homework assignment is too hard, is perceived as
busy work, or takes too long to complete, students might tune out and resist
doing it. Never send home any assignment that students cannot do. Homework
should be an extension of what students have learned in class. To ensure
that homework is clear and appropriate, consider the following tips from
teachers for assigning homework:
- Make sure students and parents have
information regarding the policy on missed and late assignments, extra
credit, and available adaptations. Establish a set routine at the
beginning of the year.
- Assign work that the
students can do.
- Assign homework in small units.
- Explain the assignment
clearly.
- Write the assignment on the chalkboard
and leave it there until the assignment is due.
- Remind students of due
dates periodically.
- Coordinate with other teachers to
prevent homework overload. Students concur with these tips. They add
that teachers can
- Establish a routine at
the beginning of the year for how homework will be assigned.
- Assign homework toward the beginning of
class.
- Relate homework to class
work or real life (and/or inform students how they will use the
content of the homework in real life).
- Explain how to do the homework, provide
examples and write directions on the chalkboard.
- Have students begin the
homework in class, check that they understand, and provide assistance
as necessary.
- Allow students to work together on
homework.
Strategy 2. Make Homework
Accommodations
Make any necessary modifications to the
homework assignment before sending it home. Identify practices that will be
most helpful to individual students and have the potential to increase their
involvement, understanding, and motivation to learn. The most common
homework accommodations are to
- Provide additional one-on-one assistance
to students.
- Monitor students'
homework more closely.
- Allow alternative response formats
(e.g., allow the student to audiotape an assignment rather than
handwriting it).
- Adjust the length of the
assignment.
- Provide a peer tutor or assign the
student to a study group.
- Provide learning tools
(e.g., calculators).
- Adjust evaluation standards.
- Give fewer assignments.
It is important to check out all
accommodations with other teachers, students, and their families. If
teachers, students, or families do not find homework accommodations
palatable, they may not use them.
Strategy 3. Teach Study
Skills
Both general and special education teachers
consistently report that homework problems seem to be exacerbated by
deficient basic study skills. Many students, particularly students with
disabilities, need instruction in study and organizational skills. Here is a
list of organizational strategies basic to homework:
- Identify a location for
doing homework that is free of distractions.
- Have all materials available and
organized.
- Allocate enough time to
complete activities and keep on schedule.
- Take good notes.
- Develop a sequential
plan for completing multi-task assignments.
- Check assignments for accuracy and
completion before turning them in.
- Know how to get help
when it is needed.
- Turn in completed homework on time.
Teachers can enhance homework completion and
accuracy by providing classroom instruction in organizational skills. They
should talk with parents about how to support the application of
organizational skills at home.
Strategy 4. Use a Homework
Calendar
Students with disabilities often need
additional organizational support. Just as adults use calendars, schedulers,
lists, and other devices to self-monitor activities, students can benefit
from these tools as well. Students with disabilities can monitor their own
homework using a planning calendar to keep track of homework assignments.
Homework planners also can double as home-school communication tools if they
include a space next to each assignment for messages from teachers and
parents. Here's how one teacher used a homework planner to increase
communication with students' families and improve homework completion rates:
Students developed their own homework calendars. Each page in the calendar
reflected one week. There was a space for students to write their homework
assignments and a column for parent-teacher notes. The cover was a heavy
card stock that children decorated. Students were expected to take their
homework planners home each day and return them the next day to class.
In conjunction with the homework planner,
students graphed their homework return and completion rates-another strategy
that is linked to homework completion and improved performance on classroom
assessments. The teacher built a reward system for returning homework and
the planners. On a self-monitoring chart in their planner, students recorded
each time they completed and returned their homework assignment by
- Coloring the square for the day green if
homework was completed and returned.
- Coloring the square for
the day red if homework was not done.
- Coloring one-half of the square yellow
and one-half of the square red if homework was late.
If students met the success criterion, they
received a reward at the end of the week, such as 15 extra minutes of
recess. The teacher found that more frequent rewards were needed for
students with emotional and behavioral disabilities.
Strategy 5. Ensure Clear
Home/School Communication
Homework accounts for one-fifth of the time
that successful students invest in academic tasks, yet students complete
homework in environments over which teachers have no control—which, given
the fact that many students experience learning difficulties, creates a
major dilemma. Teachers and parents of students with disabilities must
communicate clearly and effectively with one another about homework
policies, required practices, mutual expectations, student performance on
homework, homework completion difficulties, and other homework-related
concerns.
Recommended ways that teachers can improve
communications with parents include
- Encouraging students to keep assignment
books.
- Providing a list of
suggestions on how parents might assist with homework. For example,
ask parents to check with their children about homework daily.
- Providing parents with frequent written
communication about homework (e.g., progress reports, notes, letters,
forms).
- Sharing information with
other teachers regarding student strengths and needs and necessary
accommodations.
Ways that administrators can support teachers
in improving communications include
- Supplying teachers with the technology
needed to aid communication (e.g., telephone answering systems,
e-mail, homework hotlines).
- Providing incentives for
teachers to participate in face-to-face meetings with parents (e.g.,
release time, compensation).
- Suggesting that the school district
offer after school and/or peer tutoring sessions to give students
extra help with homework.
Summary
The five strategies to help students with
disabilities get the most from their homework are
- Give clear and appropriate assignments.
- Make accommodations in homework
assignments.
- Teach study skills.
- Use a homework planner.
- Ensure clear home/school communication.
http://ericec.org/digests/e608
.html