Sunday, July 16, 2023

What’s the Difference Between Homework and Studying? And Why Does It Matter?

At some point during the K-12 years, students should — but sometimes don’t — conceptualize the distinction between “doing homework” and “studying.” Until these two activities are understood as separate, a student’s progress remains suboptimal.

As long as studying remains a mysterious activity, often indistinguishable from doing homework, teachers often remedy the situation by assigning more homework to make up for the lack of studying. A concrete example:

A teacher might assign the students to “study pages 50 to 100” with the goal of being prepared for a classroom discussion of those pages three days from now and a written examination about those pages four days from now. This assignment will be productive if the students understand what it means to study and if they know how to study.

If the teacher suspects that the students do not know what studying is, and do not know how to study, then the teacher may well create homework to substitute for the studying that can’t or won’t happen. Such homework might be in the form of, e.g., a series of questions about the assigned pages: questions which the students must answer in written form, bringing those written answers to class after completing the homework outside of class time.

In response to those who argue that “teachers assign too much homework” or that “teachers give too great a weight to homework in the grading process,” one might answer that if more time, energy, and attention were devoted by teachers to explaining study skills; if more time, energy, and attention were devoted by students to learning study skills and to studying; and if both parents and society expected students to study; then less homework would be needed and less homework would be assigned.

There is a reciprocity: where there is more studying, there is less homework; where there is less studying, there is more homework.

Surveying school systems around the globe, one can find various configurations: some schools assign little homework, but students are expected to be able to study a text and prepare for discussions and examinations by studying the text. Other schools expect little studying, and students prepare for discussions and prepare for examinations by completing many homework assignments.

Studying is a skill which is part of the move toward independent learning. Homework is an activity which is part of dependent learning. The K-12 journey is, one hopes, a move from dependent to independent learning.