> 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.
Good!
If they want to give kids the chance to develop the skill of managing unstructured time, that could easily be fit into the school day/week in a variety of ways.
In most K-12 schools, there is a lot of time in the day that is used incredibly ineffeciently.
For my personal experience, college was a time management joke after high school, mainly because I didn’t have to spend so much bullshit/wasted time in classes.
> Homework- at home- seemed like such a fundamental part of the schooling experience.
That’s a very privileged stance to take (I usually don’t play the “privilege card”, but it’s appropriate here).
For many/most students, the home is not particularly conducive for doing homework a variety of reasons.
Maybe not for the median HN contributor, many not for the median middle class person in the US, but these groups are not the majority of students.