ADVANCING RESEARCH, IMPROVING EDUCATION                               

The National Center for Family and Community Connections with Schools

Supporting School, Family, and Community Connections to Increase School Success

About the Center

Connection Collection

Annotation from the Connection Collection

You are viewing a record from the Connection Collection, a searchable annotated bibliography database. It links you with research-based information that you can use to connect schools, families, and communities.

Title:The task matters: Parental assistance to children doing different homework assignments
Author:Shumow, L.
Year:2001
Resource Type:Conference Proceedings or Presentation
Publication
Information:
Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research Association, Seattle, WA.
Connection:School-Family
Education Level:Elementary
Literature type:Research and Evaluation

Annotation:
The study investigates how parents assist their children on homework tasks. It found that parents were more directive and controlling and less elaborative when assisting their children with an arithmetic problem-solving task than they were when assisting with a spatial reasoning task. Interviews revealed that parents perceived that arithmetic involved a straightforward, standard solution path, whereas spatial reasoning was a creative enrichment activity, and drew on their own school experiences as a foundation of what and how to teach children. The research sample was twenty randomly-selected 2nd graders from two classrooms of two schools in the Midwestern USA. Researchers observed pairs of students and their parents, and the type of parent assistance was rated during two different homework tasks, one involving arithmetic and the other a spatial reasoning task. Parents were interviewed to collect their thoughts on assisting their children. Data were coded for parent level of control. Researchers then used a t-test to compare the proportion of time the parents showed controlling and elaborative assistance during the two types of tasks. The author strongly suggests more observational research be carried out on homework interactions and that parents would benefit from guidance on the purposes of homework assignments and what might be their best contribution.

Suggested Citation Style:

Free Webinar Series
The U.S. Department of Education and its partners invite you to view the archive for the webinar, Bringing it All Together: Family and Community Engagement Policies in Action, which took place on November 16, 2011.

This is the ninth and final webinar in the series, Achieving Excellence and Innovation in Family, School, and Community Engagement.