The Homework Battle: Why Children Often Learn Better From Someone Who Isn't Mum or Dad
“I know this sounds terrible, but she just doesn’t want to hear it from me.”
If you’ve ever found yourself saying something similar, you’re not alone.
Many of the parents we speak with are highly educated professionals. Some are teachers. Some work in technical fields. Many are more than capable of helping their child academically.
Yet homework often turns into an exhausting battle.
The issue isn’t usually that parents don’t know enough.
The issue is that children and parents have very different relationships than students and teachers.
Why Homework Can Become So Emotional
At school, a teacher asks a student to complete a task.
At home, that same request can feel very different.
Children may feel:
- judged
- frustrated
- embarrassed
- defensive
Parents may feel:
- concerned
- impatient
- worried about the future
- guilty for not helping enough
Over time, even simple tasks can become emotionally charged.
A Year 5 maths worksheet that should take fifteen minutes can suddenly become an hour-long argument.
The Problem Isn’t Usually Motivation
Many parents assume their child is being lazy.
In reality, struggling students often want to succeed.
Research by Bandura (1997) found that a student’s belief in their ability to succeed, known as self-efficacy, has a significant impact on persistence and performance.
When children repeatedly struggle, they begin to expect failure.
Instead of thinking:
“I can work this out.”
they begin thinking:
“I’m not good at this.”
At that point, avoidance becomes a protective strategy.
Why an External Tutor Can Help
A tutor provides something parents often can’t.
Objectivity.
A tutor is not:
- enforcing bedtimes
- managing behaviour
- organising school lunches
- dealing with sibling arguments
Their only role is learning.
This allows students to engage differently.
Many children will happily accept guidance from a tutor that they resist from a parent.
Not because the tutor is smarter.
But because the relationship is different.
The Goal Isn’t Dependency
Good tutoring shouldn’t create dependence.
The goal is to help students develop:
- confidence
- independence
- resilience
- problem-solving skills
Over time, students begin to approach challenges with greater confidence because they have experienced success.
Final Thoughts
If homework has become a battle in your home, it doesn’t mean you’re failing as a parent.
In many cases, it means the parent-child relationship is getting in the way of learning.
Sometimes the most effective thing a parent can do is step back and allow another trusted adult to take on the teaching role.
The result is often better learning outcomes and a happier home.
References
Bandura, A. (1997). Self-Efficacy: The Exercise of Control. W.H. Freeman.
Hattie, J. (2009). Visible Learning. Routledge.
Hoover-Dempsey, K. V., et al. (2001). Parental involvement in homework. Educational Psychologist, 36(3), 195–209.
