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Why your students don?t do their homework
 
 
By Alex Case
 
I'm sure every teacher has shaken their heads at one time or another  and thought or said "Why don't those students do their homework? "Although that is  usually a rhetorical question that is quickly forgotten once planning the warmer  for the next lesson kicks in, I think looking at the real answers can be the  start of a useful process that can lead to that being true much less often than  it was. 
 
 
Why students might not do their homework and  what you can do about it:
   
1.     It's boring
Unless you were a very square kid indeed, I'm sure you  understand this feeling! You might also remember the things that made homework  something you would happily spend extra time on: getting other parts of your  brain working (artistic activities, logic puzzles, using your imagination);  project work; competition; working as a team;f inding out something new about the  world; or an excuse to interact with people (e.g. interviewing a family member).  All of these can fairly easily be brought into EFL  homework.
2.     They don't understand the instructions/ what to  do
A common excuse this  one, even when it is just an excuse... Tactics to take away that excuse  include  writing the instructions on the board, doing one example of each exercise in  class, pre-teaching the language that is used in the workbook instructions and  doing a similar exercise right at the end of the  class.
3.     It's too difficult
Another one that is very often said and quite often  true! Reactions include giving them hints on where they can go for help (e.g. the  grammar reference at the back of the students' book), giving mixed up answers,  giving an easier task for the lowerlevel students to do, doing exactly the same  exercise in class without letting them take away a copy and letting them do it  half from memory for homework, or advising them that they should work together in  study groups. 
4.     It's too easy
Less common to hear this one, but even if it is okay  for most people that means it must be too easy for at least one person! Easy ways  to make homework more challenging include taking away the multiple choice answers  to turn it into a gap fill, giving the homework for the same language point from  a different workbook, telling them todo it within a certain time limit or asking  them to do the exercise orally before they write their answers  down.
5.     They could understand the language, but couldn't  think of any ideas (e.g. arguments for and against or a  story line)
You could  try brain storming ideas at the end of the class, teaching them brain storming  and other creative techniques, or giving optional ideas they can use (but  somewhere that takes a bit of effort to get to so everyone tries to be creative  first)
6.     It's not their priority, e.g. because it doesn't  involve speaking
They may  just beright on this one! You can ask them their priorities and design the  homework around that, get them to write down what they did instead in a study  diary or share it with the class, or give tasks that can be adapted for  different students ("Write a phone conversation or an email in  which..."
7.     They just forgot/ forgot exactly what they had  to do
Such is  human nature, especially when your subconscious is telling you it is something  you don't want to do. A side from using the tips here to make it so interesting  that it is at the front of their mind all the time, ways to avoid this  include having a totally fixed routine and schedule for homework, giving them a  written schedule for all the homework at the beginning of each month or term,  having the homework written up somewhere they can easily check it like the  school notice board or blog, and checking that each person has marked the  right exercise with the date it must be finished by
8.     They don't find time/ have bad time  management
Occasions  where it seems you have no option but to fix someone's personality come up  surprisingly often in language teaching, but that doesn't make it any easier to  do. Options for this problem include doing a lesson on how they use their time  and time management,f inding out when they do have time and designing the  homework to fit in with it (e.g. a recording they can do in their car or a  compact self-study book such asa graded reader they can do standing up on the  train), telling them how longeach exercise should take, or even asking them to  write the time and date whenthey are going to do it rather than the date it must  be done by in their workbooks.
9.     It's a minor  rebellion
This could be  a symptom of problems with you or teachers more generally that will demand a  very flexible response to that particular student or group of students- for  example;some students could actually be rebelling because they think you aren't  strictenough! In these cases, someone outside the situation like someone  observing your class is probably the best person to  ask.
10. They don't see the point/ don't think it will  improve their English
Again, there is always a chance that they are right  about whatever the publishers have thrownin at the last minute to fill up that  page of the workbook. Ways to make surethis is not the case include giving them  options on what they do, doing a needsanalysis and designing it to fit in with  the skills they think they need, doinga classroom activity a second time after  they have done the homework and showhow them it is easier because of what they  have learnt, and telling them howlikely the language will be to come up on the  test or in their lives, 
11. Doing homework seems  childish
It can be  difficultt o tackle this complaint in a class where other students want more fun,  but possibilities include giving them whole pieces of writing such as emails  rather than gap fills (and certainly not word searches!), giving them homework  whichis connected to or similar to their work, giving them the answer key to  check their own answers, and giving them the choice of several pieces of  homework.
12. They lack a place where they can do it in peace  and quiet
Tell them to  move house. Only joking! Possibilities include giving them the listenings in  a different format so they can listen on headphones, having an area in the  schoolwhere they can do it, giving them homework that can be broken into 5  minute segments to do when and where they can, and a class discussion on where  other students find time and space to do it.
13. They lack equipment (e.g. a CD  player)
This is as much  a problem in developed countries as developing ones- in that case because  TEFL schools are the only places still using cassettes! Approaches  include suggesting ways the same homework can be done without the equipment,  (e.g.reading tapescript), offer the equipment in your Self- Access Centre,  telling them how they can obtain the recording etc in a different format, and  having a few copies in a different format or a few pieces of the necessary  equipment that the students can circulate amongst  themselves.
14. They have their own self-study materials or  habits which they prefer
Again, they could be right on this one. You can use  that fact by setting them a self-study schedule using their own methods with  suggestions on making it tie in with the textbook syllabus. 
A few more tips on giving  homework
 
1.     Always show that you notice if it is done or  not, even if it is a quick glance over the shoulder and "Good" or a slight  frown
2.     Recycle the language  of the homework in class, e.g. checking it straight off and using that language  in the warmer for the rest of the class
3.     Combine routine and variation- get them very  similar homework until they getused to it, then throw in something more unusual  before they get bored
4.     If  you've done your own homework, e.g. when studying the language of the country you  are living in, share that fact with the students if they haven't done  theirs
5.     Give rewards-  praise, making it easier to score points in the games in class if they have  completed the homework, skipping the next homework if they were the only one to  do the last one, setting the teacher homework etc.
Source: http://www.usingenglish.com/articles/
 
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