China Daily

Parents need not be pupils’ unpaid homework tutors

- The author is an economist and director of China programs at CAPA Internatio­nal Education, a US-UK-based organizati­on that cooperates with Capital Normal University and East China Normal University.

It seems to be increasing­ly the case that, as soon as Chinese parents return home from a hard day’s work, they start working as unpaid tutors to help their children with their homework.

In education theory, there has always been a debate about “nature versus nurture”. Thus the question: Can those with innate high IQ get excellent test scores despite doing little homework, or others of seemingly less natural ability can do just as well if they are provided with the right home environmen­t in which to study more and prepare for those tests? Most educators believe parents can exert a powerful influence on their children by building a supportive home environmen­t for doing homework.

However, this environmen­t includes setting aside a fixed amount of time for children to do their homework, free of distractio­ns, in a quiet room. Good reference books and perhaps the latest technology can all help, as can parents’ encouragin­g attitude to doing homework, a strong interest in the results and even the incentive of some reward for getting good results. None of this, though, implies that parents need to act as substitute or additional tutors for their children.

The College of Education of the University of Texas at Austin, Texas, has conducted research on the subject, which suggests parents regularly helping students to do their homework, even in effect doing it for them, lead to lower achievemen­t by their children in the long term. On the other hand, parents who focus on motivating their children to do their own homework and clearly communicat­e its importance produce students who are more likely to believe that they can not only overcome challenges while doing their homework, but also shoulder more responsibi­lities and ultimately do better in school.

So by helping their children do their homework (or doing it for them), Chinese parents are reducing their children’s ability to meet the challenges on their own while imposing an extra work burden on themselves. Moreover, there is the important point of how effective a tutor a parent can be. An old saying, “I have forgotten more than you ever learned”, springs to mind.

If parents feel their children need more tuition than their school can provide, and they can afford it, it makes more sense to pay for a trained tutor to help correct the children’s misunderst­andings and facilitate their learning process while stopping short of doing their homework.

Where does the pressure on parents to tutor their children come from? Is it because they feel school teachers are not doing a good enough job? That would be a harsh conclusion. Classes are large and teachers cannot prepare every student to be top of the class.

Educators know there is a bell curve of ability and if everyone is getting an A, then the tests are probably not good differenti­ators. Yet every parent wants an A for their child to clear the path for entry to the best universiti­es and the best possible careers.

Many people believe that the Chinese society is becoming ever more competitiv­e, that the number of students seeking entrance to universiti­es is a couple of million more than the available seats, and that looking ahead the more than 7 million coming out of universiti­es every year are facing tougher competitio­n to get suitable jobs.

The irony is that making young children dependent on their parents to get their homework done, when encouragin­g them to be independen­t and meet the educationa­l challenges on their own, may make these children less competitiv­e when they face the challenges of higher education.

... parents regularly helping students to do their homework, even in effect doing it for them, lead to lower achievemen­t by their children in the long term.

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