I Hate Homework - Let's Talk About Why (And What You Can Actually Do About It)
Understanding why homework feels overwhelming and practical strategies to make it more manageable
Ontdek gidsen en tools die bij deze situatie passen"I Hate Homework" - Let's Talk About Why (And What You Can Actually Do About It)
Look, I'm not going to sit here and tell you homework is amazing and you should love every second of it. That would be BS, and you'd stop reading immediately.
Here's the truth: You're not alone, and your feelings are completely valid.
Stanford researchers found that high school students doing more than 2 hours of homework per night experienced serious stress, physical health problems, and lack of balance in their lives.
One student in their study said: "I would get home from school and just start crying because I had so much homework and didn't know where to start."
Sound familiar?
For a quick kid-friendly take on why homework can feel overwhelming, check out this short animated video from a child's perspective:
Homework battles | Through a child's eyes
Shows how homework feels when you're the one doing it
Let's break down what's really happening:
1. Your brain is exhausted
You've already spent 6-8 hours at school. Your prefrontal cortex (the part that handles focus and decision-making) is TIRED. Asking it to do 3 more hours of algebra is like asking someone who just ran a marathon to sprint another 10 miles.
2. It feels meaningless
When homework is just busywork—copying definitions, filling out worksheets that don't teach you anything new—your brain literally rebels. Humans are wired to seek purpose. Without it, we shut down.
3. You have zero control
Psychologist Edward Deci's work on motivation emphasizes that autonomy matters for engagement. When homework feels imposed (rather than chosen), students may disengage or resist.
The Science of Motivation
Edward Deci's TEDx talk on motivation and autonomy
Here's a fun, simple video explaining motivation in school (including when you don't feel like it):
Here's where I get practical, because complaining doesn't finish that essay due tomorrow.
Strategy 1: The "Eat the Frog" Method
Do the hardest, most annoying assignment FIRST. Author Brian Tracy calls this "eating the frog" — if you have to eat a live frog, do it first thing in the morning, and nothing worse will happen to you the rest of the day.
Try this: When you get home, take a 30-minute break (not 3 hours on TikTok), then tackle your most hated assignment for just 25 minutes. Use the Pomofocus timer — it's free and stupid simple.
For a quick explainer video on this method (made for anyone, including kids/students):
Beginner's Guide to the Eat the Frog Method
Todoist explains the Eat the Frog productivity method
Strategy 2: The "Question Everything" Approach
Not all homework is created equal. Some actually helps you learn; some is garbage.
Ask yourself:
- Will this help me understand something better?
- Is this just repetition of stuff I already know?
If it's the second one, and you're drowning, talk to your teacher. Seriously. Try this script: "I understand the concept from the first 10 problems. Would it be okay if I did 5 instead of 30 to show I've got it?"
Many teachers will respect this. Some won't. But you won't know unless you ask.
Strategy 3: Use the Right Tools (Stop Suffering Unnecessarily)
Here's something most students don't realize: you have more power than you think.
I'm not saying start a revolution (though honestly, respect if you do), but I AM saying:
- Talk to your parents about how homework affects your mental health
- Speak up in class when assignments feel pointless
- Connect with other students — collective feedback is harder to ignore
- Tonight: Pick ONE assignment. Set a timer for 25 minutes. Just start. See what happens.
- This week: Track your homework time in a simple note on your phone. Just the facts: what, how long, how you felt.
- This month: Have one honest conversation with one teacher or parent about your homework load.
You're not lazy. You're not stupid. You're a human being with limited energy trying to navigate a system that wasn't designed with your wellbeing in mind.
The fact that you hate homework doesn't make you a bad student. It might just make you a smart one who recognizes when something isn't working.
Now go eat that frog. 🐸
Need to talk to someone? If homework stress is seriously affecting your mental health, check out:
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