t Directions: Pretend that you were the SSG President of the school. You are tasked to deliver a speech during the Parent’s Day celebration. Use this worksheet to outline your speech. Write your answers on a separate sheet of paper. What is the general purpose of your speech: to inform, to persuade, or to entertain?
Answers
Explanation:
Hurdles to Homework
Homework problems often reflect our changing American society. “Most children don't come
home to a plate of cookies and Mom saying, `Do your homework,' '' explains Mary Beth Blegen,
Teacher in Residence at the U.S. Department of Education and a veteran Minnesota high school
history, humanities, and writing teacher. Many parents report returning home around dinnertime
after a hectic day at work, too tired to monitor assignments. Students' personal difficulties and
competing priorities can also create obstacles to completing homework successfully.
• Ms. Dasenbrook calls home if students regularly fail to complete assignments successfully.
She often learns that parents and caregivers are not aware that a problem exists. “Parents
often want their children to do homework shortly after arriving home,” she explains.
“This is especially true if the parent is still at work because it's a productive way for the
children to spend time before mom or dad gets home.” But Ms. Dasenbrook knows from
experience that children with homework problems usually need to be supervised and held
accountable for their work in order to complete it successfully. “I've heard the story many
times,” she laments. “ `When I get home from work, my child tells me that the homework
is finished.' Some parents are tired and too busy with their homemaking responsibilities.
They find it hard to take the time needed to check their child's assignments carefully.”
Students have more activities and options that compete for their time: jobs, sports activities,
church choir, television, and family chores. Some teachers express concerns about students who
perceive homework to be useless drudgery, as well as the lack of a stigma for those who fail to
complete assignments.
More children today also have personal difficulties that are associated with a host of problems in
school, including the ability to complete homework successfully. These include:
• troubled or unstable home lives;
• lack of positive adult role models;
• teenage pregnancies and parenting responsibilities;
• chemical dependency problems; or
• a high rate of mobility, found among families who move their children from school to
school.