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RESEARCH
General
Education
HOMEWORK
Low-achieving children
benefit when moms help with schoolwork
Jim
Barlow, Life Sciences Editor
(217) 333-5802; b-james3@uiuc.edu
5/1/2001
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. Teachers
constantly call on parents to be more involved with their children's
schoolwork. In the case of struggling students, that plea is right on
target, because parental help levels the academic playing field, a University
of Illinois study has found.
The study looked closely at what makes parents in this case moms
get more involved with children's homework, in particular monitoring
and helping their children. The results showed that low-achieving elementary
students raised both their daily and long-term performance when their
mothers got involved, said Eva M. Pomerantz, a professor of psychology.
The study was detailed in April during the biennial meeting of the Society
for Research in Child Development. It also appeared in the March issue
of Developmental Psychology.
For 18 months, Pomerantz and Missa Murry Eaton, a doctoral student in
psychology, examined 166 fourth, fifth and sixth graders and their mothers
on both a daily and long-term basis. They analyzed the children's grades
in English, math, reading, science, social studies and spelling. They
asked the pupils how unsure they were about their ability to meet academic
standards. Moms rated their standards for grades and their level of
worry about their children's ability to meet them.
Perhaps expectedly, children who were doing poorly and were uncertain
about how to do better had more worried mothers. In response to their
worries, many mothers became more intrusive regarding homework. Without
waiting for an invitation to help, they either simply monitored daily
assignments to assure they were done correctly, or they helped children
through the problem-solving process. Researchers label these forms of
taking charge as intrusive support.
The conclusion, Pomerantz said, was that both responses did more good
than harm. "These practices increase children's achievement,"
she said. "We find this both for the next day at school and for
six months down the road. However, while these practices do appear to
increase children's achievement, they do not bring children's grades
up above the level of kids who already are doing well in school. That
is, when mothers monitor and help their kids without being requested
to do so, they do not turn their low-achieving kids into high-achieving
kids, but rather average-achieving kids."
Past research has suggested that such controlling tactics by parents
can promote poor achievement in children by undermining their motivation
and sense of autonomy. Such a conclusion may be true for children who
are meeting or exceeding standards, but not for low-achieving kids,
Pomerantz said.
"When parents are helping their low-achieving children with their
homework or just checking it over, they are indicating to their children
that it is important to do well at school," she said. "They
are teaching them the skills that are necessary to do well. Even though
this controlling approach may not foster a love of school, it is making
kids work harder to meet the standards."
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