HOMEWORK GUIDELINES
What is the purpose of homework?
- To encourage students to study independently.
- To develop perseverance, self discipline and self organisation.
- To practise skills learnt in the classroom.
- To allow more ground to be covered and more rapid progress to be made.
- To allow classwork to concentrate on activities which require the teacher’s presence.
- To open up areas of study using materials and sources of information not available in the classroom.
- To involve parents in students’ work.
What tasks might homework include?
- Following up or finishing work begun in class. Applying what has been learned in class.
- Exploration in libraries, reading relevant newspapers and magazines, listening to relevant radio programmes or watching TV programmes, using the internet.
- Visits to museums, shopping centres or other places of interest. Quiet reading.
- Learning for a test/examination. Preparing and organising for the following day.
- Exercises (e.g. in Mathematics, Modern Languages).
Not all the tasks above involve written work, nor, obviously, would they all be completed for the following day. They are no less important for that.
How can I help my son/daughter with homework?
- Provide, if possible, an area to study which is warm, quiet, well lit and has a flat surface on which to work. Set aside a regular study period each day and at weekends.
- Ensure she or he keeps to this even if they claim to ‘have no homework’. All students will have reading, revision, missed work to complete, materials and books to check for the following day - sufficient to fill the study period.
- Set aside a time at least once every week to discuss homework in every subject with them.
- All students in Years 7-11 will receive a student planner into which they should enter details of the work and the date by which it is due to be completed. We would ask parents to look at the planner every week and sign it each week.
How often should my child be getting homework and how much?
All students will receive a homework timetable. We would suggest the following rough guidelines on the amount of homework each school day:
| Year 7 | : | 1 hour per day |
| Years 8&9 | : | 1-1.5 hours per day |
| Year 10 | : | 1.5 - 2 hours per day |
| Year 11 | : | 2 hours per day |
- From Year 10 onwards, it is likely that the coursework element in GCSE will lead teachers to set work over several nights or even weeks rather than just one or two nights. It is, of course, vital that the quality of the completed work reflects the extra length of time given.
- From Year 10 onwards, it is likely that the coursework element in GCSE will lead teachers to set work over several nights or even weeks rather than just one or two nights. It is, of course, vital that the quality of the completed work reflects the extra length of time given.
What should I do if my son/daughter seems to be receiving too much or too little homework? Obviously, contact his/her tutor quickly if you feel this is the case. However, before you do so, it is useful to do the following:
- Check the amount of homework in each subject as exactly as you can over a period of two weeks. Remember that not all homework is written.
- Check that the work is not being done at times of which you are unaware, e.g. before school, at lunchtimes (many children use the school library then and this is encouraged by us) and before you return from work.
- It is worth checking with another parent or a friend of your son/daughter to see if their experience is similar. Often you may find it is not!
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INTERNATIONAL BACCALAUREATE DIPLOMA PROGRAMME
Guernsey Grammar School and Sixth Form Centre is a candidate school* for the Diploma Programme. This school is pursuing authorization as an IB World School. IB World Schools share a common philosophy—a commitment to high-quality, challenging, international education—that we believe is important for our students. * Only schools authorized by the IB Organization can offer any of its three academic programmes: the Primary Years Programme (PYP), the Middle Years Programme (MYP) or the Diploma Programme (and in addition the IB Career-related Certificate). Candidate status gives no guarantee that authorization will be granted. For further information about the IB and its programmes visit www.ibo.org