Don’t Help Your Kids With Their Homework

Dana Goldstein:

One of the central tenets of raising kids in America is that parents should be actively involved in their children’s education: meeting with teachers, volunteering at school, helping with homework, and doing a hundred other things that few working parents have time for. These obligations are so baked into American values that few parents stop to ask whether they’re worth the effort.

Until this January, few researchers did, either. In the largest-ever study of how parental involvement affects academic achievement, Keith Robinson, a sociology professor at the University of Texas at Austin, and Angel L. Harris, a sociology professor at Duke, mostly found that it doesn’t.

The article title is misleading, though. It’s not that you shouldn’t help your kids with their homework; you shouldn’t expect it to be the thing that separates them from their peers.

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