How to Set Up a Homework Routine That Kids Actually Follow
Slug: homework-routine-kids-that-worksPillar: Parenting > School & LearningKeyword: how to get kids to do homework without a fightExcerpt: Setting up a consistent homework routine stops nightly battles. Here's a simple system that works for primary and secondary school children.
Why Kids Resist Homework
Most children don't resist homework because they're lazy — they resist it because the system around it isn't set up properly. After a full school day, their decision-making capacity is depleted. The solution isn't pressure — it's structure.
Step 1: Pick the Right Time
The optimal homework window is 30–60 minutes after school, once a child has had a snack and a brief period to decompress — but before dinner or evening activities. For most families, this means between 4pm and 6pm. For younger children, 15–20 minutes of focused work with a short break is more effective than 45 minutes of struggling.
Step 2: Create a Dedicated Homework Space
A consistent location tells the brain "this is work mode." The space should have good lighting, necessary supplies close at hand, no TV in view, and no major distractions. A simple rule: phone in another room during homework, with access returned after work is complete.
Step 3: Make It Predictable
A consistent routine — same time, same place, same sequence — removes the daily negotiation. Use a weekly planner showing which subjects are done on which days. For secondary school students, teach them to write down all tasks with estimated times before starting.
Step 4: Be Present, Not Hovering
Stay nearby during primary school years so you can answer questions, but resist the urge to step in the moment they get stuck. Ask "What do you think you should try first?" before offering the answer. For secondary students, complete independence works better.
Step 5: End With a Clear Finish Line
Use a timer set to the expected duration. When the timer goes off, work stops. End the session with a brief check — "Is everything packed, is your bag ready?" — and then move on with no guilt or extended review.
Frequently Asked Questions
What if my child says they have no homework?
Keep the routine anyway. Use the time for reading, reviewing class notes, or practising times tables. Consistent study time matters more than whether there's a specific task assigned.
How much homework should my child have?
UK guidance suggests 1 hour per night for Years 7–9 and up to 2.5 hours for Years 10–11. Primary school children typically need 20–30 minutes.
Should I use rewards for homework completion?
Small, immediate rewards can be effective in the short term for resistant children. The goal is to wean off external rewards as the routine becomes self-sustaining — usually within 3–4 weeks.
My child has ADHD — does this routine still work?
Yes, but with modifications. Shorter sessions (10–15 minutes with movement breaks), fidget tools on the desk, and body doubling all significantly improve focus.
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