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222 points dougb5 | 5 comments | | HN request time: 0.627s | source
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zdragnar ◴[] No.45123041[source]
I recently found out that my nephew's school had no take-home homework before high school, instead having kids complete assignments during class time. At first, I was flabbergasted that they would deny kids the discipline building of managing unstructured time without direct supervision. Homework- at home- seemed like such a fundamental part of the schooling experience.

Now, I'm thinking that was pretty much they only way they could think of to ensure kids were doing things themselves.

I know it was a rough transition for my nephew, though, and I don't know that I would have handled it very well either. I'm not sure what would be a better option, though, given how much of a disservice such easy access to a mental crutch is.

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1. BobbyTables2 ◴[] No.45123086[source]
I’ve seen a similar change but didn’t realize this, makes sense.

Combined with a complete lack of textbooks, college is going to be quite a surprise!!

Oddly, English teachers tell students to use Grammerly and standardized tests use AI for grading student essays.

For writing assignments, students are given a “prompt”. Never heard it called such in my schooling…

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2. frollogaston ◴[] No.45123099[source]
"Prompt" is what I got, and this was way before LLMs
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3. zdragnar ◴[] No.45123134[source]
Same, I'd assumed the LLM "prompt" was borrowed from essay prompts in school.
4. happytoexplain ◴[] No.45123417[source]
"Writing prompt" is definitely normal pre-AI schooling terminology.
5. nkrisc ◴[] No.45130873[source]
I was given writing prompts in the 90s, and I’m sure many students long before me were as well.