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By Melissa Kelly, About.com Guide to Secondary Education since 2000

What's the Best Way to Collect Homework?

Monday September 21, 2009

Teaching, as most new teachers find out very quickly, is as much about the day-to-day instruction as it is about mastering daily housekeeping routines. Collecting homework is one part of daily classroom management that can cause many teachers problems. This article focuses on effective ways that you can take care of collecting homework with a minimum of disruption.

Comments

May 5, 2008 at 3:56 am
(1) Judi Tarn says:

Collecting homework, as you say, is one of those chores that one just has to deal with. I agree that routine is the key. Collecting homework allows for some important individual interaction with each student in your class. When homework is due, I ensure that students have a routine, manageable task to be going on with. At the beginning of the lesson, prior to heading around the room to find out who has and hasn’t completed their homework, I write an instruction on the white board. It will say something like this: if you have your homework ready to hand in – and at our school, lots of kids don’t – have it ready. If you have not completed your homework, have your diary open on your desk at today’s date. Then I walk around the room and collect homework, giving praise where it’s due. The kids who haven’t completed their homework get the dreaded ‘Work not completed in English’ stamp. I get the opportunity to encourage or ‘chastise’ according to individual needs. During all this, I’m carrying my mark book. Those who have done the work get a tick in the box. Those who haven’t get a big circle in the box, allowing me to fill it in if and when the work is submitted. This prevents that situation where kids claim they’ve given you work and you know they haven’t. Because they know I go through this regular process when anything is due, I have very few disputes about whether I’ve ‘lost’ work that they haven’t even submitted. Sounds like an arduous process, but it actually works. Cheers.

September 29, 2009 at 3:10 pm
(2) CJ says:

Great idea! I get tired of hearing MY child talk about how his teacher or substitute lost his homework, and that’s why they have zeros on their grade sheet. I know my child is disorganized and it is probably their mistake, but I don’t have the proof to hold his feet to the fire! (not literally, for heaven sake) :-)

September 30, 2009 at 5:08 pm
(3) Harold Morlock says:

Homework: For History class, I asked students to make an outline or take notes on assigned section in book.
I gave regular tests on subject matter–students were allowed to use written notes for tests. Homework notes and tests were collected. Points given just for homework notes were necessary for decent grade.
Most of my students did their homework consistently. And their grades were good to excellent.

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