How to Help: Talk with Teachers to Resolve Problems -- Helping Your Child With Homework

Homework problems often can be avoided when families and caregivers value, monitor and guide their children's work on assignments. Sometimes, however, helping in these ways is not enough. If you have problems, here are some suggestions for how to deal with them.

Tell the Teacher about Your Concerns

You may want to contact the teacher if

In some cases, the school guidance counselor or principal also may be helpful in resolving problems.

Work with the Teacher

Childlike drawing of a parent sitting at a teacher's desk with a teacher in front of a chalkboard.

Continuing communication with teachers is very important in solving homework problems. As you work with your child's teacher, here are some important things to remember:

Many teachers structure homework so that a wide range of students will find assignments interesting. For example:

—They offer students options for different approaches to the same topic or lesson;
—They give extra assignments to students who want more challenge; and
—They give specialized assignments to students who are having trouble in a particular area.

Childlike drawing of a mother sitting next to a child in a wheelchair who is working at a computer terminal.

Homework can bring together children, families and teachers in a common effort to improve children's learning.

Helping your child with homework is an opportunity to improve your child's chances of doing well in school and life. By helping your child with homework, you can help him learn important lessons about discipline and responsibility. You can open up lines of communication—between you and your child and you and the school. You are in a unique position to help your child make connections between school work and the "real world," and thereby bring meaning (and some enjoyment) to your child's homework experience.

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Last Modified: 09/01/2003