Yes, keeping up with your work keeps your brain active, helps you make better grades, and helps you learn the material easier and faster.
reggie is way smarter
Yes, students in Finland have homework
No, playing does not make you smarter the way homework does.
You get smarter by doing more problems. Homework gives you practice in whatever you're learning so you can learn more easily. It also helps you learn how to find information, which helps you to learn more. Doing homework also helps you learn how to set deadlines and meet them, and how to finish difficult tasks.
Teachers decide what homework to give to students. Homework is given in order to enhance the instruction given in the classroom, so students can learn the material well.
no
Yes, of course they do. Students who understand that doing homework prepares them for life after they graduate, as well as students who know that doing their homework helps them to succeed in school do their own homework.
Homework makes students the opposite - it helps them learn to be more responsible and get better grades.
The correct possessive noun usage is "students' lost their homework." This indicates that the homework belongs to multiple students. In contrast, "student's" denotes possession by a single student, which would not be appropriate in this context.
Yes. Spanish students have homework, just like students in all other Western schools. Spaniards typically have as much homework as other Western Europeans, which is slightly more than American or Australian students.
Neither one. The apostrophe indicates possession or ownership. It would be plain students, with no apostrophe.
It may be convenient to cheat on your homework, but you would be smarter if you did it yourself.