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Posted: 2014-12-12 13:00:00
New report ... The amount of homework teens are doing could be widening socio-economic in

New report ... The amount of homework teens are doing could be widening socio-economic inequalities. Picture: Thinkstock Source: News Limited

THE amount of homework Australian teenagers are doing each week could be worsening socio-economic inequalities, with wealthy kids doing more homework than their poorer peers.

New research by the Programme for International Student Assessment has found in most OECD countries, including Australia, teenagers from wealthy socio-economic backgrounds are doing significantly more homework than kids from poorer backgrounds.

Worsening socio-economic inequalities ... Wealthier kids across the OECD are doing about

Worsening socio-economic inequalities ... Wealthier kids across the OECD are doing about 1.6 hours more homework a week on average. Picture: Supplied. Source: Supplied

The research also revealed 15-year-olds in Kazakhstan are spending about one hour more on homework each week compared to Australian high school students, who on average do about six hours a week.

Students in Russia, Romania, Singapore and Italy are also spending more time on after school work than Australian teenagers, while 15-year-olds in Shanghai are the most studious — spending on average 14 hours a week on homework.

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Studious ... 15-year-olds in Kazakhstan are doing more homework than 15-year-olds in Aust

Studious ... 15-year-olds in Kazakhstan are doing more homework than 15-year-olds in Australia. Picture: Supplied. Source: Supplied

The PISA report found the amount of homework high school students do may “have the unintended consequences of widening the performance gap between students from different socio-economic backgrounds”.

The report said in every OECD country surveyed, teens from wealthier backgrounds were doing more homework than their disadvantaged peers, spending an extra 1.6 hours a week on after-hours school work.

PISA warns homework could be having the unintended consequence of widening inequalities.

PISA warns homework could be having the unintended consequence of widening inequalities. Picture: Supplied. Source: Supplied

Australian kids from disadvantaged backgrounds spend just less than five hours completing their homework each week, the research found, while their classmates from more socio-economically advantaged backgrounds are spending closer to 7.5 hours on homework.

The PISA report warns homework can be “particularly burdensome” for disadvantaged students.

“They may not have a quiet place to study at home or as much time to do homework due to family and work responsibilities,” it suggests.

Lagging behind but does it matter ... A tired Australian teenage student. Thinkstock. Pic

Lagging behind but does it matter ... A tired Australian teenage student. Thinkstock. Picture: Thinkstock Source: News Limited

“Their parents may not feel as capable of guiding, motivating and supporting their children as they do their homework because of work obligations, a lack of resources and other factors.”

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