Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Homework? To what end?

Is homework necessary to deliver the AP Statistics curriculum?

This week, my class will meet four times and the students have four homework assignments (see below) that they should work on prior to each class. I expect that they should spend 30 to 45 minutes on each assignment. So, I am asking my students to spend around six hours this week on AP Statistics. And this is a fairly typical week. We have about 31 weeks total from August until May for the students to prepare for the exam (vacation weeks excluded). So, that works out to about 186 hours of preparation for a 3 hour exam.


The AP courses are supposed to be college courses. Yet, we have far more class meetings than any college course I ever took. And the course is spread out over a year rather than a semester. My college courses met for 50 minutes, three times a week, over about fourteen weeks (though it may have been fewer than that). If we assume that a one-hour assignment accompanies each class meeting, then that would work out to around 77 hours of study in a semester. We should probably round that up as that does not account for projects or papers. So, let’s say 90 hours.

How is it that a college course expects a student to learn the same material in roughly half the time as a high school student?

Is homework necessary?

I would like to perform an experiment to investigate this question further. That just does not seem practical, or maybe ethical is a better choice of words.

If I were to eliminate homework altogether, my students would still have about 103 hours of preparation time which should exceed that of any college student. Add in another 20 hours maybe for project work and get a total of 123 hours which would be about 33% more than a college student. That seems like a more appropriate balance. Especially when you figure that the course would be delivered over twice the number of weeks allowing for the work to be presented in smaller chunks, and thus more easily digested.


In my mind, this should be feasible. If the AP Statistics course truly is a college course, that is. My class consists of eleven twelfth graders and two juniors. The twelfth graders are six months away from taking college courses. Do we really expect to be preparing them for college if the transition is so sharp?

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