Are you struggling to keep your child motivated with homework as the school year winds down, wondering why it suddenly feels so much harder for everyone?
In this episode of The Parenting Cipher, revisits the topic of homework originally recorded at the energetic start of the school year to address why homework becomes a battleground as the end draws near. Through personal stories, expert insights, and candid reflections, helps parents understand the shifting landscape of homework, the evolving attitudes of schools, and practical strategies for making these last weeks less stressful and more rewarding for the whole family.
Key Takeaways:
Are you struggling to keep your child motivated with homework right now? Does the end of the school year feel harder than the beginning for everyone in the house?
You are not imagining it. And your child is not suddenly lazy.
In this episode of The Parenting Cipher, Genie revisits the topic of homework originally recorded at the energetic start of the school year to speak directly to what families are feeling right now: exhaustion, overstimulation, and a child who has simply had enough.
If you have a neurodiverse child, this time of year hits different. Genie breaks down why homework becomes a battleground in spring, what schools are actually starting to change, and practical strategies your family can use to make these last weeks less stressful and a lot more manageable.
Here is something worth saying out loud: your child is not failing. They are tired.
"It's not that your kids are lazy, they're just tired because school's wrapping up...They're overstimulated."
— Genie Dawkins
By spring, kids have been performing for months. For neurodiverse children especially, school is not just learning it is constant regulation, social navigation, sensory management, and the daily work of existing in a system that was not built for how their brain works. By the time homework lands on the table at 4pm, there is often nothing left.
That context matters. When you understand what is happening in your child's body and mind, you stop fighting them and start working with them.
For many Black and brown families, homework carries weight beyond the assignment itself. There is the fear that falling behind means falling further behind. There is the pressure to prove your child can keep up. There is the generational message that you push through no matter how hard it gets.
That drive is rooted in real love and real stakes. But it can also make the end-of-year homework fight feel like something bigger than it is.
Genie's message in this episode is simple: you get to rewrite this. Homework time does not have to be a battle. It does not have to be punishment. You have the power to change what this experience means in your household.
"We get to create new narratives every freaking day with our kids. We get to up level the experience. And homework time -- co-working time -- could be lit if you want it to be."
— Genie Dawkins
Schools are changing. Research shows that homework especially for younger and neurodiverse students can do more harm than good when it becomes a primary source of stress.
"Homework was viewed as a primary stressor more than taking tests or trying to get good grades."
— Genie Dawkins
Many schools are moving away from traditional nightly homework, especially for neurodiverse children, to protect social-emotional learning and reduce student stress. That does not mean practice stops. It means the pressure around it is being rethought.
As a parent, you have the right to be part of that conversation at your child's school. You do not have to wait for the school to change on its own.
A consistent spot tells your child's brain: this is where we do this. It does not have to be fancy. A corner of the kitchen table with the same supplies in the same spot is enough. Consistency signals safety for neurodiverse kids, and safety makes learning possible.
Instead of sending your child to do homework alone, sit nearby and do your own work bills, emails, reading. Work alongside them.
"Family co-working time makes my youngest son not feel like he's being punished in some way." — Genie Dawkins
This one shift can change the whole energy of homework. Your child is not isolated with a task. They are part of the household doing what the household does.
Workbooks, worksheets, and learning apps can fill gaps without the weight of a graded assignment. For children who may have learning gaps, consistent low-stakes practice is more valuable than high-pressure homework completion.
Finished one page? That is a win. Sat down without a fight tonight? That is a win. Genie recommends making homework time genuinely fun put on music, set a timer, build in a reward. Celebration is not bribery. It is brain science.
Today's episode playlist pick: 'Celebration' by Kool & The Gang. Because sometimes homework time should be a party.
Do not wait for a problem to get big before you reach out. Ask your child's teacher what the homework expectations are for the end of the year. Ask if the workload can be adjusted. Ask what supports are available.
You are not being difficult. You are being a parent.
Here are three things you can bring to your next teacher check-in or IEP meeting:
If your child has an IEP or 504, this is also a good time to review whether end-of-year transitions are addressed in their plan. If they are not, ask for it to be added before next year.
Genie Dawkins is a special education consultant, advocate for neurodiverse families, and host of The Parenting Cipher. With years of experience supporting families through IEP meetings, school advocacy, and building effective home routines, Genie blends lived experience as a mother of neurodiverse sons with deep professional expertise in special education systems.
Her approach is warm, direct, and unapologetically centered on what families of color actually need not what the system was designed to offer. Every episode of The Parenting Cipher is built around one goal: helping parents and children find joy, connection, and success together.
These last weeks are hard. You are tired too. And you are still showing up, still searching for answers, still in the fight for your child.
That is not nothing. That is everything.
Ready to survive and even enjoy the last stretch of homework season? Listen to the full episode, share it with a parent in your circle who needs it, and join the TPC community at the link below. We are in this together.
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