This is one of those stories that takes a bit of explaining,
but it has the perfect punchline. Or it proves my point. Always nice when that
happens.
Sam’s homework has become a bone of contention over the last
year or so. Not with Sam, but with school. The homework they provide is all
online – either playing a times tables game called TT Rockstars… or an
equivalent spelling game called Spelling Shed. As parents, we’re really
conscious of restricting the amount of screen time Sam has as there’s plenty of
evidence that too much can affect attention span, mood and academic achievement
(among about a thousand other things). Call us old fashioned, but we’d prefer
Sam to be given paper-based homework as the online programmes prove
ultra-addictive, and encourage an unpleasant competitiveness among classmates
and classes… something Sam’s school seem to encourage by offering prizes to the
students who have been online the most. One of these prizes last year was to
gorge yourself on a chocolate fountain… you couldn’t make this up.
Last year, Sam would often come away from playing these
games red-faced and furious; it just wasn’t good for his health. We reached the
point where he was getting so wound up that I rang the head teacher and told
her we were banning the games. There was much more to the conversation than that,
but I’ll spare you the details.
When the new school year kicked off in September, so did the
pressure to play these bloody homework games again. We decided to give Sam
another chance, but we told school we were monitoring it and if it looked like
the homework was becoming too competitive again, that’d be the end of it. Sam’s
actually been dealing with it much better this year, doing short bursts of
activity on the games and not getting too stressed out… until last week, when
suddenly we found him clamouring to go back on the Spelling Shed game more and
more. We asked him what had changed and he explained that every week in
assembly, they congratulated the class that had got the top score, and every
week for the whole term, one class had won it. (Never mind that this was a
class in the year above.) Sam and his friends
were determined to beat that class, just once, so they’d committed to
increasing their game play until they won. “Just one time,” he said, “that’s
all.”
By the time we realised what was going on, Sam and his class
were actually ahead, so it looked like they’d succeed in their quest and
hopefully everything would go back to normal.
And then, at the last minute, the other class won again.
And that was when all hell broke loose. Let’s call it
Shed-Gate. Because it seemed that a boy in the year above, let’s call him Edgar Teabag
(because that’s his name… well, it' s not, but it could be) had been caught cheating. He’d not been
playing the game at all… but he’d worked out how to hack it and give himself
(and therefore his whole class) the highest score every week.
M’lud… the prosecution rests.
Completely unrelated: this is a track
Sam’s been singing along to since I added it to our latest in-car CD.
Bram Tchaikovsky, aka Peter Bramall, was the lead singer of 70's Airport-botherers The Motors. When that band flew off in separate directions, Bram formed his own group of power-poppers, releasing three albums before going off to find an honest job. (He also played guitar on Into The Valley by The Skids, if you’re keeping score.) Sarah Smiles reached #32 in The Netherlands Top 40 in 1979. Listening to it now, I can’t believe it wasn’t Top Ten everywhere…
Homework was the trigger for my disillusion with teaching.
ReplyDeleteManagement was the trigger for mine.
DeleteIn effect that was the same for me, but the homework issue started it.
DeleteI'm horrified at that school tale, Rol. I had no idea - good on you for making a stand. I had hoped kids were still being asked to scribble in exercise books (are there even blackboards any more?). The competitiveness worries me too, it never worked for me, just made me feel shit (even if I was really good at something). Hope things change now that the cheating has been revealed...and that Sam will be less stressed.
ReplyDeleteGreat song, though, it's so 1979, such a good year for music and yet I don't recall ever hearing it before.
Blackboards are long gone. I still have a whiteboard, though they keep trying to get me to write on a computerised whiteboard. Which is awful. Ironically, exercise books are still used because the exams are still all on paper so kids need to develop the ability to write extensive pieces by hand. Long may that continue. Homework is a different matter though.
Delete'...offering prizes to the students who have been online the most...' '...one of these prizes last year was to gorge yourself on a chocolate fountain...' Strewth. This doesn't sound right at all.
ReplyDeleteSarah Smiles is any absolutely brilliant pop song.
Good grief, you could not make this up.
ReplyDeleteI know, guys. I wish I was making it up.
ReplyDeleteCrikey I’m so glad all this nonsense didn’t take place when DD was at school - it doesn’t sound healthy at all (and as for that chocolate fountain - they make me feel sick just looking at them). Good on you for taking a stand.
ReplyDeleteLove the song but to me it sounds like something from the early ‘70s, West Coast of America. Still can’t believe the Motors only had a hit with Airport. It was one of ‘the’ songs of 1978.
Alyson
DeleteI'm pretty sure the only reason they push this so much is that it gives them concrete stats about homework participation that they can them wave in front of Ofsted. We had similar pressure at The Bad Place.
Delete