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> Uh... always?

Source?



Reality. Unless you have some sort of magical thinking where you actually believe that parents helping their children with homework and assignments is some sort of new expectation.


Notwithstanding that you're conflating "helping with homework" with teaching them from nearly the ground-up, there's no evidence that broadly middle-class parents have always helped kids with their homework.

My parent's generation was not well educated and did not help, nor do I know anyone else who's parents helped them. They often did not even graduate, so they could go work.


To be blunt, I never conflated a fucking thing. Kids bring homework home. They don't understand something. They ask a parent for help. The parent explains it to them, and at the very least, shows the child how to solve the problem the way that they learned it. It's why there's so much consternation about common core and "new math," because parents feel helpless when it comes to solving problems with their children since they aren't taught to solve these equations the same way that the parents were.

When it comes to reading in particular, this is normally done at home and there is a direct correlation between how much time a parent spends with their child teaching them to read and providing them with additional reading materials and how well they end up being able to read when they're an adult. And given that all students interface with study materials by reading, then it follows that a child with an involved parent regarding homework in general and reading in particular will have better academic outcomes.

We've got 60 years of popular culture that has actively ridiculed parents who DON'T help their kids with their studies.

I really don't give a shit about how well educated your parents were. If anything, your anecdote shores up the point you think you're degrading.


Anger and snark with nothing to say, and seem to ignore that my anecdote is just a counter to yet another anecdote, not evidence.

> To be blunt, I never conflated a fucking thing.

Look up the comment tree to the original question you responded to. Teaching kids gradeschool-level math/science is not the same thing as helping with homework.

> It's why there's so much consternation about common core and "new math,"

There's far more consternation about "discovery-based learning" curriculums and disruption in classrooms.

> We've got 60 years of popular culture that has actively ridiculed parents who DON'T help their kids with their studies.

This was also pulled out of thin air.


> Look up the comment tree to the original question you responded to. Teaching kids gradeschool-level math/science is not the same thing as helping with homework

Your reading comprehension is as poor as your communication skills. Teaching them things they don't know to shore up what they learned in class is EXACTLY what helping them with their homework is about.

Child: "I don't understand X."

Parent: "Well, let's go over your materials to help you understand what X is."

This is NORMAL. It is also TEACHING.

> There's far more consternation about "discovery-based learning" curriculums and disruption in classrooms.

I can tell you've never been a parent or spoken to parents.

> This was also pulled out of thin air

LOL.




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