| 英文摘要 |
The purpose of this study is to explore the effect size of the asso¬ciation between students’homework and academic achievement, as well as the impact of family socioeconomic and cultural status(ESCS) and national income on the effect size of the association between students’homework and academic achievement. 557,754 samples from 77 coun¬tries (including Taiwan) were collected from the Program for Interna¬tional Student Assessment (2022) from 77 countries, including Taiwan. The analysis showed that the average effect size of the correlation between homework and academic achievement among students in 77 countries was .044, which was a low effect, among which 45 countries with positive effects, 14 countries with no obvious effects, and 18 countries with nega¬tive effects when students done homework at home. The countries with the highest effect sizes were South Korea, Cambodia, Taiwan, Australia, and Albania, with effect sizes ranging from .20 to .26. The effect size of Taiwan was .21. The countries with the highest negative effect sizes were Sweden, Denmark, Estonia, Finland and Israel, with effect sizes ranging from -.11 to -.18. The correlation between homework and mathematics learning achievement among students in European, American, Asian, and Oceanian countries had low effect sizes, and the order of effect size was Oceanian, Asian, European, and American countries. The higher the ESCS and national income in 77 countries, the smaller the effect size of the association between homework and academic achievement. That is, the higher the ESCS of the family and the more developed the economy, the lower the effect of students’homework on academic achievement. Mathematics education in advanced countries emphasized the impor¬tance of understanding rather than mechanical practice. If students did not strengthen their understanding of mathematics through homework practice, it will be difficult to improve learning effectiveness. |