Skip to content

Learning-Science Digest

Fringe of Human Learning Technology and Emergence

Categories

  • 4E Cognition
  • Ability grouping
  • Accelerated learning
  • Acting/ Role play
  • Active learning
  • Active/ Action learning
  • Activities
  • Adaptive Learning
  • Administration & Leadership
  • Affordances
  • After-School Programs
  • Agency/ Autonomy
  • Analogy & Analogy based Learning
  • Anchored Instruction
  • Andragogy
  • Anthropology/ Ethnographic learning
  • Apprenticeship
  • Approaches
  • Apps
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Assessment
  • Asynchronous Learning
  • Attitude
  • Banking model
  • Behavior Design
  • Behavioural
  • Belonging
  • Biology
  • Blended, Flipped, etc
  • books
  • Brain
  • Bricolage
  • Catholic Education
  • Causation
  • Coaching
  • Cognitive Diversity
  • Cognitive Load
  • Cognitive Science
  • Collaborative learning
  • Communities of practice
  • Competency-Based Learning
  • Complexity Theory
  • Compliance Training
  • Computational Learning
  • Computer Based Math
  • Concept Differences
  • Concept similarity
  • Connected Learning
  • Connectivism
  • Constraints
  • Constraints-Led Approach
  • Constructionism
  • Constructivism
  • Contextualized Learning
  • Contrast and Polarity
  • Courses
  • Creativity/ Innovation
  • Critical articles
  • Critical Pedagogy
  • Critical Thinking
  • Cultural Intelligence
  • Cultural Learning
  • Cumulative culture
  • Curriculum
  • Curriculum Design
  • Deliberate Practice
  • Design Science/ Approaches
  • Desirable Difficulty
  • Dialogic Learning
  • Differential learning
  • Digital Learning
  • Direct Instruction/ KLC
  • Disability and Learning
  • Discovery Learning
  • Discussion/ Debate
  • Disposition/Propensity
  • Distributed Cognition/ Learning
  • DIY learning/ Edupunk
  • Dynamics and learning
  • Early Intervention
  • Ecological Approch
  • Ecological Dynamics
  • Ed-tech
  • Education
  • Education Models
  • Education Policy
  • Education Thinkers
  • Effectuation
  • Elaboration
  • Embedded Cognition
  • Embodied Cognition
  • Emergence
  • Emergency learning
  • Emerging technology
  • Emulative learning
  • Enactive learning
  • Enskilment
  • Entangled pedagogy
  • Entrepreneurial Learning
  • Ethics and Moral learning
  • Evaluation
  • Evidence
  • Evolution and Learning
  • Exams
  • Exaptation
  • Exercise
  • Experiential Learning
  • Expertise
  • Explicit instruction
  • Extended Cognition
  • Family/ Religion
  • Feedback
  • Frameworks
  • Future Of Learning
  • Games/ Gamification
  • Generation Effect
  • Generative AI
  • Genius
  • Geragogy
  • Grading
  • Happiness and learning
  • Heuristics
  • Heutagogy
  • Higher Education
  • History Of Education
  • Home Slider
  • Home/ Home Schooling/ Learning
  • Homework
  • Human Machine Interface
  • Humor
  • Hypercorrection
  • Improvisation
  • Informal Learning
  • Innovation
  • Inquiry
  • Instructional Design
  • Instrumentalism
  • Intelligence
  • Interviews
  • Job training
  • Knowledge Rich Curriculum
  • Knowledge: Types. etc.
  • Labelling
  • Language Learning
  • Law and Legal Learning
  • Learning and Development
  • Learning Difficulties
  • Learning Environments
  • Learning for life
  • Learning in Chaos
  • Learning in complexity
  • Learning Management System
  • Learning Myths
  • Learning Programming
  • Learning Science
  • Learning Stations
  • Learning Systems
  • Learning Techniques/Methods
  • Learning Thinkers
  • Learning under anxiety/pressure/stress
  • Learning/ Teaching Strategies
  • Learning/ Understanding By Design
  • Looping effect
  • Maker Learning
  • Mastery
  • Mathew Effect
  • Maths Learning
  • Measurement
  • Medical Education/Learning
  • Memory
  • Meta-Analysis
  • Meta-Cognition
  • mindset
  • Mnemonics
  • Montessori
  • Motivation
  • Motor Learning
  • Music/ Arts and Learning
  • Mystagogy
  • Needs and Need based Learning
  • Networked Learning
  • Networks and Ecosystem
  • Neurodivergence
  • Neuroscience
  • Non Computational
  • Non-Representational
  • Nonlinear Pedagogy
  • Novelty and learning
  • Observational learning
  • On-the-Job Training
  • Online and MOOC Learning
  • outdoor-education
  • Pedagogy
  • Peer Learning
  • Personalized Learning
  • Philosophy Of Education
  • Philosophy Of Learning
  • Philosophy Of Science
  • Place-Based Learning
  • Play/ Ludic Pedagogy
  • Policy
  • Pragmatism
  • Problem-based learning
  • Productive Failures
  • Professional education
  • Professional Learning
  • Progressive Education
  • Project Based Learning
  • Proximity and Learning
  • Psychological Issues
  • Question asking/ Question design
  • Reading , Literacy , etc
  • Recognition
  • Reification/ Reductionism
  • Relational Expertise
  • Relational Learning
  • Religion
  • Research
  • Resting/ offline consolidation
  • Retrieval
  • Salience/Closeness
  • Scaffolding
  • Science Of Learning
  • self-efficacy
  • Self-Organization
  • Self-Paced Learning
  • Self-Regulated/ Self-Directed
  • Service Learning
  • Short Concept Introduction
  • Signalling
  • Simulation or Simulative Learning
  • Situated Learning
  • Skill
  • Sleep and Rest
  • Social Effects
  • Social Learning
  • Social-emotional learning
  • Society-Ecosystem etc
  • Socioeconomic Factors
  • Sociology Of Learning
  • Software And Technology Review
  • Speaking/Public Speaking
  • Spiral design
  • Sports learning
  • Sports Science
  • Story/Narrative based learning
  • Studying
  • Teacher/ teaching
  • Testing
  • Theology and learning
  • Theories
  • Tools, Aids, Artifacts
  • Training
  • Training Needs Analysis
  • Transdisciplinary/ Interdisciplinary, etc
  • Transfer Of Learning
  • Trending News
  • Uncategorized
  • Uncertainty and learning
  • Variable Practice
  • Vicarious learning
  • Video playlist
  • Virtual, Augmented, etc
  • Visible Learning/ Hattie
  • Visual Learning/Drawing
  • Vocational Education
  • Wakeful Resting
  • Work Place Learning
  • Workshop Model
  • Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD)
Primary Menu
  • Home
  • About
  • Thinkers
    • Learning Thinkers
    • Education Thinkers
  • Design For Learning
    • Design Science/ Approaches
    • Instructional Design
    • Behavior Design
    • Curriculum Design
    • Learning/ Understanding By Design
    • Motivation
    • Ecological Approch
    • Blended, Flipped, etc
    • Games/ Gamification
  • Tools/Techniques/Methods
    • Learning Techniques/Methods
    • Education Models
    • Testing
    • Retrieval
    • Blended, Flipped, etc
    • Differential learning
    • Dialogic Learning
    • Computer Based Math
    • Tools, Aids, Artifacts
    • Knowledge Rich Curriculum
    • Cognitive Load
    • Online and MOOC Learning
    • Scaffolding
    • Contrast and Polarity
    • Play/ Ludic Pedagogy
    • Problem-based learning
    • Cultural Learning
    • Direct Instruction/ KLC
    • Deliberate Practice
    • Visual Learning/Drawing
    • Games/ Gamification
    • Acting/ Role play
    • Analogy & Analogy based Learning
    • Inquiry
    • Improvisation
    • Constructionism
    • Situated Learning
    • Productive Failures
    • Anthropology/ Ethnographic learning
    • Project Based Learning
    • Connected Learning
    • Nonlinear Pedagogy
    • Personalized Learning
    • Maker Learning
    • Virtual, Augmented, etc
    • Service Learning
    • Constructivism
    • Connectivism
    • Vicarious learning
    • Active/ Action learning
    • Computational Learning
    • Relational Learning
    • Apprenticeship
    • Communities of practice
    • Home/ Home Schooling/ Learning
    • Contextualized Learning
    • DIY learning/ Edupunk
    • Constraints-Led Approach
    • Peer Learning
  • Domains
    • Language Learning
    • Entrepreneurial Learning
    • Maths Learning
    • Sports Science
    • Theology and learning
    • Sports learning
    • Professional education
    • Law and Legal Learning
    • Catholic Education
    • Higher Education
    • Medical Education/Learning
    • Work Place Learning
    • Learning Programming
    • On-the-Job Training
    • Job training
    • Compliance Training
  • Approaches
    • Neuroscience
    • Social Learning
    • Ecological Approch
    • 4E Cognition
    • Active learning
    • Transfer Of Learning
    • Cumulative culture
    • Embodied Cognition
    • Evolution and Learning
    • Embedded Cognition
    • Differential learning
    • Dialogic Learning
    • Experiential Learning
    • Learning Environments
    • Cultural Intelligence
    • Enactive learning
    • Constraints-Led Approach
    • Non-Representational
    • Self-Organization
    • Relational Learning
    • Relational Expertise
    • Enskilment
    • Extended Cognition
    • Distributed Cognition/ Learning
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Education Policy
  • Expertise
Subscribe or Login
  • Home
  • Visible Learning/ Hattie
  • The Role of Homework in Student Achievement: A Closer Look Through the Lens of Visible Learning
  • Visible Learning/ Hattie

The Role of Homework in Student Achievement: A Closer Look Through the Lens of Visible Learning

kiran Johny February 10, 2024

Homework has long been a contentious topic in education, sparking heated debates among educators, parents, and policymakers. Is it an essential tool for reinforcing classroom learning, or is it an outdated practice that adds unnecessary stress to students’ lives? In Visible Learning (Hattie, 2009), John Hattie dives into this debate by synthesizing decades of research on homework’s impact on student achievement. By analyzing his findings, we can better understand the nuanced role homework plays in learning and how it might be optimized for maximum benefit.

What Does the Research Say?

According to Hattie’s meta-analysis, which aggregates data from over 800 studies, homework has an average effect size of d = 0.29, placing it below the “hinge point” of d = 0.40—the threshold at which an educational intervention begins to have a noticeable impact on student outcomes (Hattie, 2009, p. 245). This suggests that while homework does contribute positively to achievement, its effects are modest compared to other teaching strategies.

However, the story doesn’t end there. The impact of homework varies significantly depending on several factors:

  1. Age Matters:
    Homework shows markedly different effects across age groups. For elementary students, the effect size is quite low (d = 0.15), whereas for high school students, it rises substantially (d = 0.64) (Hattie, 2009, p. 246). This disparity likely reflects older students’ greater capacity for independent study and self-regulation, as well as their ability to engage with more complex material outside the classroom.
  2. Subject-Specific Differences:
    The type of subject also influences homework’s effectiveness. Mathematics tends to yield smaller gains, while science and social studies see larger benefits (Hattie, 2009, p. 246). These variations may stem from differences in how easily certain subjects lend themselves to independent practice versus deeper conceptual understanding.
  3. Quality Over Quantity:
    Shorter, focused assignments tend to produce better results than lengthy ones. Trautwein et al. (2002) found that excessive homework could undermine motivation and lead students to internalize incorrect routines—a phenomenon supported by Hattie’s observations (cited in Hattie, 2009, p. 247). Furthermore, task-oriented homework—such as drills or rote memorization—often yields higher effects than open-ended problem-solving tasks, particularly when teacher guidance is limited.
  4. Teacher Involvement is Key:
    One of the most critical takeaways from Visible Learning is that homework without active teacher involvement offers minimal value. Monitoring progress, providing timely feedback, and aligning homework with clear learning intentions are crucial components for success (Hattie, 2009, p. 247). Without these elements, homework risks becoming a mere checkbox activity rather than a meaningful extension of classroom instruction.

Why Homework Often Falls Short

Despite its potential benefits, homework frequently fails to live up to expectations due to several common pitfalls:

  • Lack of Alignment with Learning Goals: Too often, homework assignments are disconnected from explicit learning objectives, leaving students unsure of their purpose.
  • Inadequate Feedback: Many students complete homework without receiving constructive feedback, making it difficult for them to correct errors or deepen their understanding.
  • Equity Issues: Not all students have access to supportive home environments conducive to completing homework effectively, exacerbating disparities in achievement.
  • Misplaced Focus on Compliance: Parents and teachers sometimes prioritize completion over effort, inadvertently rewarding busywork rather than fostering genuine engagement with the content.

As novelist Richard Russo humorously notes in Visible Learning, many students view homework as counterproductive if they consistently get answers wrong:

“Doing homework wrong… was worse than not doing it at all, because doing it required time and effort and yielded the same results as not doing it” (Russo, 2007, cited in Hattie, 2009, p. 246).

This sentiment underscores the importance of designing homework that builds confidence and competence rather than frustration.

Making Homework Work: Evidence-Based Recommendations

To maximize the impact of homework, educators should consider the following principles drawn from Hattie’s work:

  1. Set Clear Expectations: Ensure that homework aligns with specific learning intentions and success criteria. Students should know exactly what they’re expected to achieve and why the assignment matters.
  2. Provide Timely Feedback: Regularly review homework submissions and offer actionable feedback. This helps students identify misconceptions early and reinforces correct practices.
  3. Tailor Assignments to Developmental Levels: Recognize that younger students require simpler, shorter tasks, while older students can handle more challenging, extended projects.
  4. Balance Surface and Deep Learning: Incorporate both rehearsal activities (e.g., practicing math problems) and opportunities for deeper exploration (e.g., applying concepts to real-world scenarios). However, ensure that deep learning tasks are adequately scaffolded to prevent confusion.
  5. Foster Parental Support Without Over-Involvement: Encourage parents to create a conducive environment for homework but avoid pressuring them to teach or correct assignments. As Hattie notes, parental facilitation often correlates negatively with student attitudes toward homework unless it focuses on fostering autonomy (Hattie, 2009, p. 246).

Conclusion: Rethinking Homework for Greater Impact

While homework remains a staple of traditional schooling, its role in enhancing student achievement is far from straightforward. According to Visible Learning, its effectiveness hinges on thoughtful design, consistent monitoring, and alignment with broader pedagogical goals. Rather than viewing homework as a one-size-fits-all solution, educators must approach it strategically, tailoring assignments to meet the diverse needs of their students.

By shifting the focus from quantity to quality—and ensuring that homework serves as a bridge between classroom instruction and independent learning—we can transform this often-maligned practice into a powerful tool for growth. After all, as Hattie reminds us, the ultimate goal of any educational strategy should be to make learning visible—to both teachers and students alike.


References
Hattie, J. A. C. (2009). Visible Learning: A Synthesis of Over 800 Meta-Analyses Relating to Achievement. Routledge.
Russo, R. (2007). Bridge of Sighs. Vintage Books.
Trautwein, U., Köller, O., Schmitz, B., & Baumert, J. (2002). Do homework assignments enhance achievement? A multilevel analysis in 7th-grade mathematics. Contemporary Educational Psychology, 27(1), 26–50.

Continue Reading

Previous: Finland education: Localism at best
Next: Leveraging the “Default” Principle in Instructional Design

Categories

Archives

  • September 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • July 2021
  • June 2021
  • May 2021
Copy Right © 2025–2026 Learning Science Digest (lsdigest.com). All rights reserved.

Copyright © 2025-2026 LsDigest.com

Copyright © 2025-2026 LsDigest.com | MoreNews by AF themes.