#Edchat 08-25 Does homework raise attainment?

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As I am not a classic school teacher I would like to cover this topic from a business point of view.

Being an independent language teacher homework is a very effective tool for me and for my students it definitely raises attainment. The reason for this is simple: homework is outsourcing.

Outsourcing works great for the economy so there is no reason why teachers should not use it themselves. Of course outsourcing / homeworks must offer a benefit for the student.

If you have a look on the report that is now circulating for the past couple of days on Twitter and several blogs you know that blended learning is the most effective way of learning these days. Homework is a part of it.

For me as language coach this means that I am completely outsourcing vocabulary and grammar learning to web services. Why? First of all the student is paying for my attention. To my mind learning vocabulary during a lesson is a waste of time and money. Of course I answer questions that might come up during the asynchronous learning part but web services like Livemocha are getting constantly better so most of the questions can be answered there.

So if you are delivering a good assignment  you are left with more time in your classroom. That means you can focus on things you could not have done before. More conversation, more interaction, more creativity. Simply delivering a better lesson because you as a teacher are the most important person in the room. Students want to learn from you, not from books or slides or videos. They want your knowledge, your point of view.

More time means also better preparation. I can search for new texts, new exercises and as my courses are conversation driven I can spend more time to prepare interesting and actual topics for each single student.

Like Don Tapscott is saying in his blog Grown Up Digital:

The moral of the story: Students would be better served with much of the curriculum being online. And to repeat what I said in the book, this does not mean a diminished role for teachers. Their time would be freed up to give extremely valuable one-on-one teaching.

I will write a longer post about outsourcing for teachers hopefully later this week after the ETCon.

Taking this to school teaching, I think homework must not be boring anymore as this is still the label attached to it. Students could do research via the internet, work together on wikis or blogs, make films or photo stories. To my mind they don’t even need to write their thoughts down. As a history teacher for example I would accept audio files of my student’s thoughts. I don’t need to correct grammar or vocabulary but I want to get them into thinking. And one of the best ways is just talking, spinning the story. Pen and paper (or a keyboard) are only a barrier in this case.

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  • HI Kirsten,

    I'm an online Business language teacher and I agree with your comments here Kirsten. Live Mocha is a great place to learn, and study....but it doesn't provide conversation classes, or work specific task based learning, so yes, I do the same thing...use other sites to help students learn, and stay motivated.
  • Hi Robert,
    thanks for your comment. I think you made a good point here: stay motivated. I believe tht language learning is a marathon not a sprint so you need motivation, also besides the motivation you get from your teacher, during the run.

    I hope that we will see more tools for teachers in the future so we can use those platforms more efficiently.
  • Jasmine
    Hi Kirsten, Interesting blog here. do you mean that you send your students to websites to learn vocab etc? You might be interested in this blog by a UK teacher who says that teacher time should be used for discussion etc www.t2l2think.blogspot.com

    Jasmine
  • Hi Jasemine, yes, that's what I do. I send them either to other websites or offer them self build content like flashcards at websited who offer services like this.

    And yes, I think teacher time should be better used for interaction between the teacher and the students. And thanks for the blog, will check it out :)
  • chinamike
    Ya, I can see your thinking on this issue and how this could be perceived as outsourcing. And I am totally with you on teachers adopting outside tools. I tend to think of this as "strategic partnering" however. I guess whether it is outsourcing or partnering would depend on how the "other side" looked at the issue.
  • I hope it will evolve to a partnership. This would mean that those partner provide me as a teacher with tracking tools or possibilities to play around with their content so I can implement this even better to my live teaching.

    This is one of the projects I am working on at the moment ;).
  • chinamike
    I think your notion that homework should be seen as outsourcing is a bit of a misnomer. It is only outsourcing if you send the student to a place that makes money supplying the student with homework. If you give the student homework you are not outsourcing. If you send them to a free site you are not outsourcing. Students are merely following your directions.

    But I digress. Indeed homework is fantastic because it increase time on task. And guess what, studies show that by increasing time on task that you increase learning. By asking students to spend more of their precious time doing homework you increase the chances that they will be even more successful at language learning.
  • From a business point of view it is outsourcing. I don't have to use my own time and capacities with tasks other companies can as good as or better than me. I can concentrate on what I do best: offer excellent conversation based classes, 100% individualised to the student's needs.

    Right now there are not that many tasks that can be outsourced. But vocabulary is one of them. And I see a huge potential in the near future when those providers will work closely together with the teachers.

    As I work with adults most of the time who have a busy schedule homeworks are also a great way to keep them close to the topic during lessons. Some can work more on them, some less but all of them appreciate homework.
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