9 Classroom Management Strategies to Use When Students Won’t Complete Homework

classroom management Dec 06, 2023

Getting students to complete homework is a problem familiar to all teachers, especially with students who lack motivation. If they’re not working in class where we can stand over them, they certainly aren’t going to work at home. Here are six ways to encourage students to complete and return their homework – and none of them involve you dishing out a never-ending stream of detentions or making promises of certificates and other treats (a.k.a. ‘Bribes’!) 

1. Make sure the work appeals to them.  It sounds obvious but the more appealing you can make your homework in terms of having sufficient challenge, interest and practical value, the more chance your students will attempt it. With competitors like television, games, friends and the now-ubiquitous social media apps, if they see no point in it or if it’s too boring/dull/easy it’s obviously not going to appeal. As a long-term strategy, if students gain a sense of pride and accomplishment when they finish work, they are more likely to attempt future tasks. 

2. Make it achievable.  Ideally homework should be continuation of class work (rather than introducing something new) so they know how to do it. They need to know exactly what they’re aiming for and what the finished product should look like. There’s no point in giving them something they haven’t a clue about, because it just won’t get done. 

3. Include an element of choice.  Choice is an incredibly powerful motivator that should be included in homework tasks. Give them a choice of task (‘any 3 tasks from the following 5’) or a choice in the presentation method – ‘produce a mind-map, report, illustration, magazine article or model’ etc. (See ‘Creative Homework Assignments’ in resource area/cd).

4. Write it down.  Always make sure students have the task (and any helpful instructions) written down clearly before they leave the room, or post the task up on a blog/website so that they can access it any time. This sidesteps the ‘I didn’t know what to do’ excuses and provides them with a reminder should they get stuck. 

5. Include group interaction.  We know that students like to work together so there is some merit in the idea of occasionally (or even regularly if it proves successful) setting a project which requires students to work in groups for completion. The individual accountability from peers involved in group work gives extra impetus to get the task completed. 

6. Give them chance to vent.  Some students can have chaotic personal and family lives, so I often find it useful to provide them with something that’s calming for them. Whether that’s a breathing exercise, some sort of physical activity or a journal to write in each day, it gives them a chance to vent about their feelings instead of bottling them up. Of course, this doesn’t have to be their sole homework activity, but setting it as their first task can be calming and help them to focus on the second, learning-based activity that you’ve set as homework.

7. The homework lottery.  If you’ve read any of my previous work, you’ll know I do not recommend bribery in the classroom as it can do more harm than good in the long run. But, as long as it’s properly controlled, using a reward system can be motivational. The ‘homework lottery’ revolves around dropping the names of those who have completed their homework into a hat. You could run it every week or every other week, and every time a task is completed, that person gets one ticket in the hat – even if that means multiple chances are earned in the interim periods between draws. The rewards don’t have to be particularly expensive to you – a fast food voucher, a relevant book, or anything else inexpensive is usually sufficient to get the students motivated and keen to win. Every now and then, you can throw in a much better prize to keep them hooked. 

8. Plan a ‘personal time’ timetable.  For some of my most reluctant students, I realised that the main problem was that they lacked organizational and time-management skills to actually do their homework at home. They’d get home, watch TV, play video games, and just not make time for the work because they didn’t see it as a personal priority.  

So, what I did was sit down with these students and start planning their time with them, creating a personal timetable. That included incorporating those ‘fun’ activities, like watching television or playing a game, but also slotting in 15 to 30 minutes where they could deliver their homework. They truly appreciated that extra bit of time that I was giving them and eventually they didn’t need the timetable at all.  

9. Get parents/carers involved.  If you have children you’re no doubt fully aware how much of a problem the whole issue of homework can cause at home. Parents do the cajoling, reminding, threatening, punishing and bribing while kids do the lying, avoiding, promising, making excuses and delaying. In many homes civil war breaks out over this single issue almost every night, while in others, peace reigns. With this in mind, many parents/carers (even those that appear totally unsupportive) will welcome help and direction from school on the subject of homework and this can be a very effective way of gaining their support in return. 

To succeed in getting support from reluctant parents, convince them that you are trying to help them and their child and to make life easier for all. You don’t want to give them the impression that it’s for your own benefit or to meet school targets; rather, it’s to help their child progress and succeed. You need to show them how a little bit  of support from them is going to have a dramatic effect on their child’s progress in school and consequently on home life – happier child, easier life, fewer arguments, fewer detentions, fewer requests to visit school for a ‘little chat’ etc. (See ‘Sample Homework Letter to Parents’ & ‘Ten Tips For Parents to Help With Homework’ in Behaviour Tool Kit Appendix.) 

Begin by explaining to parents that homework involves the efforts of three separate parties – school, child, home – and that each party is dependent on support and input from the other two if the system is to work properly. Show them a record of any homework tasks that have been missed and explain the school policy and procedure for dealing with missed homework. Show them that it is neither pleasant nor beneficial for the student. If possible show them statistics for the effect of missed homework on overall grades. 

Then show them the specific things they can do to help together with the days/times when this should happen. They’ll need a copy of the homework schedule showing the days the work has to be handed in together with the suggested time to be spent on a task. Setting a regular, definite block of time – say 4:30-5:30pm – helps teach them time management. 

Try to encourage them to set a time early on in the evening so that a) the child is still fairly alert and b) Love Island hasn’t started. The idea is to create a habit, a routine which doesn’t interfere with evening entertainment too much.  

Another reason to set an early time is that it enables consequences to be brought into play . If homework is allowed to be last thing at night and the child is allowed to play on a computer or watch TV all night before that, how can consequences be applied?

They’ll need a list of necessary materials and supplies to make available at home (in some cases the school could supply these) and you could even provide them with a set of ‘parent notes’ for a task the child is likely to find challenging so that they can take part and provide some assistance and instruction. I’ve dealt with many parents with severe academic limitations and they were delighted to receive such material. 

Finally, they may benefit from some behaviour management guidance in terms of suitable consequences, such as withholding TV/computer game/mobile phone/pocket money until homework is completed. The easier you can make it for them to take part, the better the chances they will. 

Whenever we’ve done this in schools the feedback from both the parent and the child has been very positive – parents enjoy spending some quality time with a child they have possibly had very little quiet contact with for a long time, while the students start to enjoy a sense of achievement as well as increased parental contact/attention. 

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