Kay P J, Fitzgerald M, Paradee C, Mellencamp A
College of Education and Social Services, University of Vermont, Burlington 05405.
J Learn Disabil. 1994 Nov;27(9):550-61. doi: 10.1177/002221949402700902.
This article views homework through the eyes of parents in a rural area whose children with disabilities spent a majority of their time in general education classrooms. The qualitative analysis of data from individual interviews, focus groups, and parent action research logs yielded five themes: (a) Parents felt ill-prepared to help their children with homework; (b) parents wanted more information about the classroom teachers' expectations of their child and of their roles as parents in helping with homework; (c) parents wanted their children to be given individualized homework assignments; (d) parents valued hands-on homework and projects in which the whole family could participate; and (e) parents wanted a two-way communication system that would allow them to become partners on their child's instructional team.
本文从农村地区一些家长的视角审视家庭作业,这些家长的残疾子女大部分时间在普通教育课堂上课。对来自个人访谈、焦点小组和家长行动研究日志的数据进行的定性分析得出了五个主题:(a)家长觉得自己没做好帮助孩子完成家庭作业的准备;(b)家长希望获得更多关于课堂教师对其孩子的期望以及他们作为家长在协助孩子完成家庭作业时所扮演角色的信息;(c)家长希望孩子能得到个性化的家庭作业任务;(d)家长重视全家都能参与的实践型家庭作业和项目;(e)家长希望有一个双向沟通系统,使他们能够成为孩子教学团队中的合作伙伴。