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Tens of thousands of parents sign petition calling for an end to excessive homework | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Tens of thousands of people have signed an online petition calling for the regulation of "excessive amounts of homework" given to schoolchildren in Spain. | |
The campaign was started by Madrid mother, Eva Bailen, who began to see the effect up to three hours of homework a day was having on her 10-year-old son. | |
Ms Bailen – who has two other daughters at the same school – said her son, Diego, began showing signs of stress after spending so much time trying to keep on top of his homework. | Ms Bailen – who has two other daughters at the same school – said her son, Diego, began showing signs of stress after spending so much time trying to keep on top of his homework. |
She said: “The problem in Spain is that the burden of homework is up to each teacher. | She said: “The problem in Spain is that the burden of homework is up to each teacher. |
“If he [Diego] doesn’t finish it – the following day at school – he is not allowed out to play.” | “If he [Diego] doesn’t finish it – the following day at school – he is not allowed out to play.” |
Her campaign even attracted the support of a vocal secondary school teacher, Alfonso Gonzalez, who wrote to Ms Bailen, telling her: “I've done loads of homework for my daughter and I don't regret it. | Her campaign even attracted the support of a vocal secondary school teacher, Alfonso Gonzalez, who wrote to Ms Bailen, telling her: “I've done loads of homework for my daughter and I don't regret it. |
“I did it because I wanted her to have a happy childhood and 10 hours of sleep at night. I would argue that, thanks to that, my daughter is now a healthy teenager and a great athlete who loves to read.” | |
“I believe homework is nonsense,” he added. | “I believe homework is nonsense,” he added. |
Where Ms Bailen’s petition is calling for the regulation of homework in Spanish schools, Mr Gonzalez wants the campaign to go a step further – and ban it altogether: “What a child needs to learn during primary education can be learned during the hours that he is at school,” he explained. “Homework is for secondary school.” | Where Ms Bailen’s petition is calling for the regulation of homework in Spanish schools, Mr Gonzalez wants the campaign to go a step further – and ban it altogether: “What a child needs to learn during primary education can be learned during the hours that he is at school,” he explained. “Homework is for secondary school.” |
Jose Miguel Campo, who is a member of the Professional College of Education of Madrid, accepts that there is, indeed, a lack of consistency across classrooms, but still believes homework is essential for a child’s learning. | Jose Miguel Campo, who is a member of the Professional College of Education of Madrid, accepts that there is, indeed, a lack of consistency across classrooms, but still believes homework is essential for a child’s learning. |
He said: “Personally, I believe it is important to develop the capacity of doing work at home and I don't think that six hours a week is excessive.” | He said: “Personally, I believe it is important to develop the capacity of doing work at home and I don't think that six hours a week is excessive.” |
Ms Bailen’s petition is currently 36,000 signatures away from reaching its goal of 150,000 supporters. | Ms Bailen’s petition is currently 36,000 signatures away from reaching its goal of 150,000 supporters. |
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