Parental Involvement in Homework
Parental Involvement in Homework
PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT
HOOVER-DEMPSEY
IN HOMEWORK
ET AL.
The article reviews research on parental involvement in student homework. It is focused on understanding: why parents become involved in their childrens homework; which activities and strategies they employ in the course of involvement; how their homework involvement influences student outcomes; and which student outcomes are influenced by parents involvement. Findings
suggest that parents involve themselves in student homework because they believe that they
should be involved, believe that their involvement will make a positive difference, and perceive
that their children or childrens teachers want their involvement. Parents involvement activities
take many forms, from establishing structures for homework performance to teaching for understanding and developing student learning strategies. Operating largely through modeling, reinforcement, and instruction, parents homework involvement appears to influence student success
insofar as it supports student attributes related to achievement (e.g., attitudes about homework,
perceptions of personal competence, self-regulatory skills). Recommendations for research focused on the processes and outcomes of parents homework involvement are offered, as are suggestions for school practices to enhance the effectiveness of parental involvement in homework.
Parental involvement in education has received much attention in recent decades as various school-improvement efforts
have sought to enhance student learning. Although careful to
suggest that parental involvement is an adjunct to
well-developed educational programs, many investigators
have reported that parental involvement, including involvement in student homework, is related to student achievement
and personal attributes conducive to achievement (e.g.,
self-regulation, perceptions of academic competence; e.g.,
Delgado-Gaitan, 1992; Grolnick & Slowiaczek, 1994; Xu &
Corno, 1998). Although questions have been raised about the
value of parental involvement in homework (e.g., Casanova,
1996; Cooper, 1989; Levin et al., 1997), most school practice
suggests that elementary and secondary students throughout
the United States are asked to do homework, and parents are
often asked to become involved in supporting students homework performance (e.g., Cooper, 1989; Roderique, Polloway,
Cumblad, Epstein, & Bursuck, 1994).
This review is focused on parents motivation for involvement in homework, the content of their involvement,
the mechanisms through which their involvement appears
to influence student outcomes, and the consequences of
their involvement. Its purpose is to integrate research findings across a variety of studies within a theoretically sound
Requests for reprints should be sent to Kathleen V. Hoover-Dempsey, Department of Psychology and Human Development, P.O. Box 512, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37203. E-mail:kathleen.v.hoover-dempsey@vanderbilt.edu
TABLE 1
Characteristics Studies Included in the Review
Authors
Ames (1993)
Purpose
Homework Measures
Teacher reports of communication practices; parent responses to questionnaire including time spent with student related to schoolwork
Parent responses to questionnaire, interview on homework problems, student
feelings about homework, observation
of homework behavior
Parent questionnaire on varied student
problems with homework
Parent interviews with items on parent
strategies for homework (knowledge,
help, encouragement)
Parent responses to questionnaire assessing family involvement in math
homework, other homework
Parents unstructured comments on
larger questionnaire focused on homework, tests, grades
Examine effectiveness of homework management intervention for students under conditions of parent participation versus no parent
participation
Examine parents involvement attitudes and
practices
Parent questionnaire, interviews regarding family routines, including homework routines with child
Student questionnaire items on homework frequency, type, working conditions, parent assistance
Student questionnaire with items on
homework, including parental help,
interactions related to homework
Parent questionnaire on homework attitudes; student, parent ratings of homework performance, parents program
implementation activities
Parent questionnaire on child homework
problems; description of childs specific homework problems
Clark (1993)
Delgado-Gaitin (1992)
Epstein (1986)
Examine contemporaneous and predictive relations among parenting style, adolescent attributions, educational outcomes
Parent attitudes, behaviors, ideas as related in part to homework/home learning, observed over 9 months, field
notes, audiotapes, videotapes
Parent questionnaire responses on involvement experiences, responses to
teacher involvement practices, including home learning activities
Teacher responses to questionnaire with
items on attitudes, practices related to
parental involvement in learning activities at home
Parent, teacher responses to parallel
checklists of student problems in completing homework
Student responses to questionnaire with
items on parent involvement in academic life, homework time
Parent, student responses to parallel
questionnaires, structured telephone
interviews on homework (time, quality, parental monitoring)
Parent responses to interview items on
parental checking, supervision, surveillance of homework
Student responses to questionnaire including items on time spent on homework in four academic subjects
(continued)
TABLE 1 (Continued)
Authors
Grolnick, Ryan, & Deci (1991)
Purpose
Homework Measures
Muller (1995)
Design: survey; participants: mothers of 92 1st, 3rd graders, teachers (4 at each grade level); Israeli, predominantly middle and upper middle SES, urban
Design: case study; participants: 2 students (3rd, 4th
graders) and families; working class, Irish heritage
Paulson (1994)
Reynolds (1992)
Examine relationship between parenting and student school performance in multiple ethnic
groups
Examine parental encouragement of school
achievement among Mexican American children
Explore influence of parenting style and parent
involvement on student achievement
Examine links between Asian American, other
minority groups student achievement and
qualities of home environments (including activities conducive to learning)
Examine relationship between authoritative
parenting and achievement as mediated by
quality of parent teaching strategies (including
scaffolding)
Examine correspondence among parent, teacher,
and student ratings of parent involvement
Examine school district homework policies, including communications with parents, expectations about parents homework roles
Sanders (1998)
Design: survey; participants: 827 8th graders; predominantly lower income, African American
Scott-Jones (1987)
Shumow (1998)
Parent responses to questionnaires including items on parent help with student schoolwork, study, reading
Parent responses to questionnaires including items on involvement behaviors related to schoolwork
Parent, student responses to questionnaires with items on parent interest,
monitoring of homework
Parent, student responses to questionnaire items on frequency of parental
assistance with homework, student
time on homework
Parent interview including items on
homework; observation, ratings of
parent behaviors while helping student do math homework tasks
Parent, student responses to questionnaires including items on parental involvement in homework, learning activities at home
District survey responses, including
items on district family homework
communications, expectations for parents homework roles
Student responses to questionnaire including items on parental support and
monitoring of homework
Parent, teacher, student responses to interviews including focus on parent
help with schoolwork, home teaching,
homework monitoring
Parent interview items on educational
practices; behaviors with child in natural and teaching task situations
Parent behaviors during homework, observations on students thinking; conversation transcripts; analyzed for parent scaffolding, knowledge of
students math development
(continued)
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200
TABLE 1 (Continued)
Authors
Purpose
Voelkl (1993)
Note.
Homework Measures
Student responses to questionnaire items
including parent control over homework
Student responses to questionnaires with
items on parents homework help, encouragement of schoolwork
Parent, student interview items on attitudes about schooling, student ideas,
and reactions to homework
Proportion and accuracy of homework
assignments completed, parent comments on intervention
Parent and student responses to questionnaire items on schoolwork, discussion, homework supervision
Student responses to questionnaire including items on parentchild homework interactions, monitoring, checking of schoolwork
Parent and student interviews (including
stimulated recall), observation during
homework sessions, analyzed for
themes
Parent and student responses to questions regarding frequency of
motherfather help with homework
201
itive difference for the child (e.g., Bandura, 1997; Hoover-Dempsey & Sandler, 1997). Self-efficacy theory suggests
that parents behavioral choices are guided in part by the outcomes they expect to follow their actions; the stronger the perceived self-efficacy for a task (e.g., helping with homework),
the higher the goals they are likely to set and the greater the persistence they are likely to exhibit in reaching those goals
(Bandura, 1997). Consistent with these suggestions, parents
have reported reasonable confidence in their ability to help
with homework; their confidence, in turn, has been associated
with involvement (e.g., Ames, 1993; Balli, Demo, &
Wedman, 1998; Chen & Stevenson, 1989; Cooper, Lindsay,
Nye, & Greathouse, 1998). Even where parents have recorded
doubts about involvement, their misgivings have been related
not to doubts about their capability but often to lack of adequate information (e.g., Kay et al., 1994). In general, parents
higher in efficacy are more likely to be involved in homework
help (e.g., Hoover-Dempsey, Bassler, & Brissie, 1992) and
those who help children with homework are likely to believe
that their help positively influences student outcomes (e.g.,
Chen & Stevenson, 1989; Stevenson et al., 1990).
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HOOVER-DEMPSEY ET AL.
tend to use both general approaches to homework involvement, apparently responding to specific homework task demands and individual childrens learning preferences (e.g.,
Hoover-Dempsey et al., 1995).
203
Modeling
Engage in Metastrategies Designed to
Help the Child Learn Processes Conducive
to Achievement
Finally, parents homework activities may focus on the childs
development of learning processes and self-awarenesses conducive to achievement in general. Such activities may focus on
helping the child assume developmentally appropriate independence for managing learning tasks. Parents activities in
this category may also enhance the childs self-management
skills (e.g., for coping with distractions) and the childs skills
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HOOVER-DEMPSEY ET AL.
Reinforcement
Reinforcement as a mechanism through which parents involvement influences student outcomes suggests that behavior patterns occur and are maintained because of their
consequences (e.g., Skinner, 1989). Thus, children learn behaviors when they consistently associate them with desired
consequences. Insofar as the parents involvement activities
include use of positive and valued consequences in response to
the childs homework behaviors, reinforcement influences
learning because it increases the likelihood that the child will
demonstrate similar skills, attitudes, and behaviors again. Parents are particularly well suited for helping children learn
through reinforcement, in part because teachers (because they
work with groups of students) may find it difficult to administer contingencies of reinforcement with sufficient frequency
or consistency (Skinner, 1989). Parents are well suited also because they often have direct knowledge of reinforcement contingencies effective for the individual child and are often able
to respond to behavior directly and immediately.
Parental Instruction
Parents involvement activities also appear to influence student outcomes through instructional interactions that range
from simple queries to processes intended to develop strategic understanding and problem-solving capacity. Especially
insofar as they reflect what theorists have identified as guided
or collaborative learning (e.g., Rogoff, 1990), parents instructional activities appear salient to students learning of attitudes, skills, and knowledge associated with school success.
In collaborative learning, parents share information and
structure task-related processes in ways that enable the child
to learn effectively and assume appropriate personal responsibility for learning. Such instructional activities may include
directing child attention to task components, simplifying the
task as needed, explaining new information, relating information to similar contexts, or responding to questions. Even
when parents have less than comprehensive knowledge of
content or pedagogical strategy, they sometimes have advantages over teachers in instructional roles; for example, they
tend to respond to their childrens unique learning preferences and styles (e.g., Hoover-Dempsey et al., 1995; Miller &
Davis, 1992) and may thus offer help particularly appropriate
to child abilities and understanding.
Student Achievement
Examination of parental involvements influence on achievement has yielded mixed findings. Some have reported positive links (e.g., Callahan, Rademacher, & Hildreth, 1998;
Fehrman, Keith, & Reimers, 1987; Reynolds, 1992); others
have found negative relationships (e.g., Muller, 1995;
Natriello & McDill, 1986; Voelkl, 1993). The findings may
be mixed in part because multiple motivations appear to underlie parents decisions about involving themselves in their
childrens homework. For example, parents and students may
find involvement enjoyable when the student is successful,
and involvement may allow the parent to see the students
learning. On the other hand, parents may experience demands
for involvement in homework (from self, the child, or
teacher) when the childs school performance lags behind expectations.
Ultimately, however, a solitary emphasis on student
achievement is unfortunate. Parents homework involvement
behaviors are more logically related to proximal student outcomes (e.g., attitudes about homework, perceptions of personal competence) than to student performance on summary
assessments of achievement. The power of these proximal
variables rests in the reality that student achievement ultimately depends not only on parents behaviors, but on variables that are often (and increasingly, across the course of
development) outside of parents control (e.g., classroom instruction, student decisions to use skills, knowledge and related strategies in learning tasks). Thus, the most critical
outcomes associated with parental involvement in homework
may be found in the attitudes, ideas, and behaviors enacted by
students in the course of school learning (see also Grolnick &
Slowiaczek, 1994; Steinberg, Elmen, & Mounts, 1989).
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HOOVER-DEMPSEY ET AL.
Through such specific manifestations of modeling, reinforcement, and instruction, parents involvement activities
influence not only child achievement, but students development of learning pertinent attributes, including positive attitudes toward learning tasks, positive perceptions of personal
competence and ability, productive attributions about the
causes of successful performance, and knowledge of personally effective learning strategies. In their influence on such
proximal outcomes, parents homework involvement activities develop student attributes directly associated with school
success.
CONCLUSION
Taken together, this literature suggests that parents decide to
become involved in students homework because they believe
they should be involved, believe their involvement will make a
difference, and perceive that their involvement is wanted and
expected. Parents homework involvement, once engaged, includes a wide variety of activities, ranging from the establishment of home structures supportive of learning to complex
patterns of interactive behavior intended to enhance the
childs understanding of homework in particular and learning
processes in general. The literature also suggests that parents
involvement activities influence student outcomes through
modeling, reinforcement, and instruction. Operating through
these broad mechanisms, parents involvement activities have
been positively related to student achievement and, perhaps
even more importantly, to student attributes proximally related to achievement (e.g., attitudes toward homework, perceptions of personal competence, self-regulation).
Although the literature as a whole supports these summary
observations, the body of empirical work on parental involvement in homework might be strengthened in several respects.
The most critical need is for theoretically and empirically
grounded research focused specifically on the content, processes, and outcomes of parents involvement in homework.
The studies summarized in Table1 have illuminated several
aspects of parents involvement, most notably the range of activities included in parents efforts to help their children with
homework and selected outcomes associated with those involvement behaviors. The majority of these studies, however,
have defined homework involvement in relatively
unidimensional terms or have embedded the topic within inquiry focused more directly on related issues.
The importance of parents to childrens school accomplishments and the success of notable homework intervention
programs underscore the importance of continued inquiry into
parents roles and influence in their childrens homework performance. Particularly in need of specific examination are parents motivations for engaging in homework help, the
dynamics of effective parentchild interactions during homework involvement (e.g., examining the contributions of involvement activities within categories outlined in Table 2 to
specific student outcomes), and the specific mechanisms responsible for involvements influence on student outcomes.
Similarly important are continuing efforts, building on interventions examined in some of the studies reviewed here, to develop and test well-designed approaches to improving school
invitations to involvement. Developmental and curricular
considerations also suggest the importance of examining appropriate variations in parents homework involvement
across time, as well as shifts in outcomes associated with parental involvement across the years of schooling. This set of
efforts seems particularly important in light of findings that
many parentsacross socioeconomic, ethnic, and geographic groupsassume that they should be involved in
homework and value-specific guidance for involvement from
schools and teachers.
Implications for schools in this body of work center in part
on responses to parents motivations and abilities for involvement in homework. Parents become involved in homework
insofar as they believe they have a role to play, believe their
involvement will make a difference, and perceive that their
children and teachers want their involvement. Schools may
take specific steps to enhance each of these motivations. For
example, they may communicate directly and specifically
why and how involvement is important to childrens learning;
they may offer specific suggestions for involvement that support parental assumptions that they do indeed have a role to
play in their childrens success and that their activities make a
difference. They may also offer explicit and specific invitations to involvement. Such steps have been successful in eliciting and enhancing parental involvement as reflected in
studies incorporating both broad examinations of teachers
involvement practices and relatively detailed inquiries into
parents responses to school invitations.
School practices may also be informed and improved by
understanding the broad range of activities that characterize
parents homework involvement and the varied student outcomes associated with involvement. The range of activities
offers a wide set of suggestions for specific school invitations
to involvement, appropriate for specific developmental levels
or grades, learning content, and family circumstances. The
range of student outcomes associated with parents involvement suggests that schools might well focus on specific proximal outcomesfor example, attitudes about homework,
perceptions of personal competence, self-regulatory strategiesas particularly amenable to parental influence.
The observed and potential benefits of parental support
for childrens homework learning suggest strongly the
wisdom of increased support for well-grounded research
designed to illuminatesystematically, across developmental levels and varied learning taskswhy and under
what conditions parents involvement benefits student
learning. The success of schools and the children they
serve can only be enhanced by increased understanding of
parents roles, activities, and influence in the development
of student success.
TABLE 2
What do Parents do When They Involve Themselves in Childrens Homework?
1. Establish physical and psychological structures for the childs homework performance
Provide space and materials for accomplishing homework, arrange environment for successful student learning (e.g., Clark, 1993; Delgado-Gaitan, 1992;
Hoover-Dempsey et al., 1995; McDermott et al., 1984; Scott-Jones, 1987; Xu & Corno, 1998)
Specify regular times for homework, establish structured patterns of time use (e.g., Brody et al., 1999; Clark, 1993; Hutsinger et al.,1998; Schneider &
Lee, 1990)
Develop rules and procedures protecting student from distractions (e.g., Clark, 1993; Hoover-Dempsey et al., 1995; Xu & Corno, 1998)
Articulate and enforce expectations, rules and standards for homework behavior (e.g., Clark, 1993; Delgado-Gaitan, 1992; Hoover-Dempsey et al., 1995;
Natriello & McDill, 1986; Steinberg et al., 1992)
Control homework processes (e.g., remind student, insist on or ensure homework completion; e.g., Bryan & Nelson, 1994; Carrington et al., 1997;
Ginsberg & Bronstein, 1993; Hutsinger et al., 1998; Okagaki & Frensch, 1998; Paulson, 1994; Sanders, 1998; Schneider & Lee, 1990)
Help student structure time, space, and materials for homework (e.g., Carrington et al., 1997; Xu & Corno, 1998)
Follow student lead in scheduling and structuring homework time (e.g., Delgado-Gaitan, 1992; McDermott et al., 1984; Scott-Jones, 1987)
Structure homework time within the flow of family activities; parental availability on demand (e.g., Delgado-Gaitan, 1992; Hoover-Dempsey et al.,
1995; McDermott et al., 1984; Scott-Jones, 1987)
2. Interact with the students school or teacher about homework
Communicate with the teacher about student performance, progress, needs related to homework (e.g., Delgado-Gaitan, 1992; Jayanthi et al., 1995;
Shumow, 1998)
Meet school requests related to homework (e.g., sign completed tasks, offer requested help, participate in homework intervention program; e.g., Balli et
al.,1998; Callahan et al., 1998; Delgado-Gaitan, 1992; Pratt et al., 1992; Shumow, 1998)
Create mutual homeschool goals for student outcomes (e.g., Shumow, 1998)
3. Provide general oversight of the homework process
Monitor, supervise, or provide surveillance of the homework process (e.g., Balli et al., 1998; Callahan et al., 1998; Clark, 1993; Delgado-Gaitan, 1992;
Forgatch & Ramsey, 1994; Ginsberg & Bronstein, 1993; Milne et al., 1986; Schneider & Lee, 1990; Sui-Chu & Willms, 1996; Voelkl, 1993; Xu &
Corno, 1998)
Check for or establish student understanding of homework tasks (e.g., Bryan & Nelson, 1994; Clark, 1993; Hoover-Dempsey et al., 1995; Pratt et al.,
1992; Shumow, 1998)
Attend to signs of student difficulty or success related to task or motivation (e.g., Bryan et al., 1995; Delgado-Gaitan, 1992; Xu & Corno, 1998)
Motivate, show interest in student performance (e.g., Baker & Stevenson, 1986; Hoover-Dempsey et al., 1995; McDermott et al., 1984; Paulson, 1994;
Xu & Corno, 1998)
Coordinate or secure others help with homework (e.g., Baker & Stevenson, 1986; Balli et al., 1998; Hoover-Dempsey et al., 1995; Xu & Corno, 1998)
4. Respond to the students homework performance
Reinforce and reward (using extrinsic or intrinsic approaches) students homework efforts, completion, correctness (e.g., Callahan et al., 1998; Forgatch
& Ramsey, 1994; Ginsberg & Bronstein, 1993; Strukoff et al., 1987; Sanders, 1998; Xu & Corno, 1998)
Recognize and offer emotional support for student performance, ability, effort (e.g., DeBaryshe et al., 1996; Delgado-Gaitan, 1992; Scott-Jones, 1987;
Shumow, 1998)
Review, check, correct homework (e.g., Bryan et al., 1995; Bryan & Nelson, 1994; Callahan et al., 1998; Clark, 1993; Constantino et al., 1991;
Delgado-Gaitan, 1992; Muller, 1995; Okagaki & Frensch, 1998; Voelkl, 1993)
5. Engage in homework processes and tasks with the student
Assist, help, tutor, work with or do homework with student (e.g., Ames, 1993; Baker & Stevenson, 1986; Bryan & Nelson, 1994; Clark, 1993;
Delgado-Gaitan, 1992; Hoover-Dempsey et al., 1992; Leone & Richards, 1989; Milne et al., 1986; Okagaki & Frensch, 1998; Okagaki et al., 1995;
Peng & Wright, 1994; Shumow, 1998; Steinberg et al., 1992; Zellman & Waterman, 1998)
Teach student in direct, structured, convergent ways (e.g., learn facts, derive answers, drill, practice, memorize; e.g., Delgado-Gaitan, 1992
Hoover-Dempsey et al., 1995; Hutsinger et al., 1998; Okagaki et al., 1995)
Teach student using less direct, more informal methods (e.g., respond to questions, follow student lead; e.g., Delgado-Gaitan, 1992; Hoover-Dempsey et
al., 1995; Hutsinger et al., 1998; McDermott et al., 1984; Okagaki et al., 1995; Scott-Jones, 1987)
6. Engage in metastrategies designed to create a fit between the task and student skill levels
Break learning tasks into discrete, manageable parts (e.g., Forgatch & Ramsey, 1994; McDermott et al., 1984)
Observe, understand, teach to students developmental level (e.g., Pratt et al., 1992; Shumow, 1998)
Enact scaffolding processes (e.g., DeBaryshe et al., 1996; Pratt et al., 1992; Shumow, 1998; Xu & Corno, 1998)
7. Engage in interactive processes supporting student understanding of homework
Model or demonstrate appropriate learning processes or strategies (e.g., Clark, 1993; DeBaryshe et al., 1996; Okagaki et al., 1995; Pratt et al., 1992)
Discuss problem-solving strategies (e.g., Shumow, 1998)
Help student understand concepts, check for understanding (e.g., Hutsinger et al., 1998; McDermott et al., 1984; Shumow, 1998)
Develop students problem-solving skills, ability to apply or transfer learning (e.g., Kay et al., 1994; McDermott et al., 1984; Shumow, 1998)
8. Engage in metastrategies helping the student learn processes conducive to achievement
Support students self-regulation skills, strategies, and personal responsibility for homework processes and outcomes (e.g., Carrrington et al., 1997;
Delgado-Gaitan, 1992; Ginsberg & Bronstein, 1993; Hutsinger et al., 1998; Shumow, 1998; Xu & Corno, 1998)
Help student organize personal thinking about assignments (e.g., Delgado-Gaitan, 1992; Shumow, 1998)
Encourage student to self-monitor, focus attention (e.g., Hutsinger et al., 1998; Shumow, 1998; Xu & Corno, 1998)
Teach and encourage the student to regulate emotional responses to homework (e.g., Xu & Corno, 1998)
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ACKNOWLEDGMENT
Special thanks to Howard M. Sandler for ongoing consultation and advice and Drew Wilkins for participation in the revision process.
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