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Industry: Email Alert RSS FeedBuell, John. Closing the Book on Homework: Enhancing Public Education and Freeing Family Time
Adolescence, Summer, 2005
BUELL, John. Closing the Book on Homework: Enhancing Public Education and Freeing Family Time. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2004. 176pp. $49.50 (h), $16.95 (p).
In this, the sequel to The End of Homework, John Buell extends his case against homework. Arguing that homework robs children--and parents--of unstructured time for play and intellectual and emotional development, Closing the Book on Homework offers a case for why homework is an outgrowth of broader cultural anxieties about the sanctity of work itself. According to Buell, the importance of play is culturally underappreciated. Not only grade schoolers, but high school students and adult workers deserve time for the kind of leisure that fosters creativity and sustains a lifelong interest in learning. Homework is assigned for many reasons, many having little to do with learning, including an accepted, if unchallenged, belief that it fosters good work habits for children's futures. As Buell argues, homework does more to obstruct the growth of children's minds, and consumes the time of parents and children who may otherwise develop relationships that foster true growth and learning. Sure to fuel the growing debate on school reform. Closing the Book on Homework offers a roadmap for learning that will benefit the wellbeing of children, parents, and teachers alike.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Libra Publishers, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Gale Group