May I ask. How many hours per day do you expect a child to go to school? Why do they even need homework? Don't they get teachers who can teach the subject in an 8 hour day?
I don't get homework at all. If she was teaching the kids the correct way they would "get" it during school hours and know it. Do they seriously have to spend 10-12 hours per day doing school work?
I know this is sort of the devils advocate part of me saying all this because this is something I wondered as a kid. I thought "I did this all day, why do I have to come home and do more of it". I ended up hating math and stuff due to homework all the time. I was a good student too.
If the teacher is doing her job and the kids are learning how to do it why do they need to come home and do it again? That's my point.
There are labor laws prohibiting children from working over so many hours per day. This pertains mostly to actors and other places where children draw a paycheck for holding down a position.
If those laws were the same for schools their school day would even be shorter than it is now.
When my grandson went into 4th grade he had to go to a school across town since his local school had no room for him. If a student in his grade left he would be able to go to his home school. The teacher he had at the school across town gave him up to 4 hours of homework per day. I was there, it was assignment after assignment. He sat there and worked the whole time and even ate his dinner while working.
Once he transferred to the other school he had homework once or twice per week and it was usually a paper or some other writing assignment he had to do with unlimited time on a home computer. His grades went up and he actually had less behavior problems since he was able to do more that school for over 12 hours per day 4-5 days per week.
Kids in "America" as you put it have learned that a well rounded person who is doing sports and other activities has a lifestyle as they get older that will allow them better health and the ability to have a lot more coping skills as an adult.
The learn how to do teamwork that later will translate into "gets along well with their co-workers/works well with co-workers", they learn to take not winning each and every time and turn it into working harder to achieve the best they can do, they learn so many more things that this post would be 2-3 times longer.
The facts are what people are posting. Homework does NOT mean their getting a better education, homework does NOT mean that they are attending a good school, it just means they have a teacher that is too busy to do her job and they have to have the parents do it for them.