Roberto Nevilis may never have existed, but the practice he supposedly invented conquered every classroom on earth.
The widespread attribution of homework to a Venetian teacher named Roberto Nevilis in 1905 (sometimes 1095) appears in countless online sources but lacks any verifiable historical documentation. No scholarly work has confirmed Nevilis existed.1
What is documented is that the practice of assigning schoolwork to be completed at home expanded dramatically in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, alongside the spread of compulsory education. As school systems formalized curricula and grading, homework became the mechanism for extending classroom discipline into the hours after dismissal.2
Resistance followed quickly. In 1901, California passed a law banning homework for children under fifteen, a prohibition that remained in effect until 1917. The Ladies' Home Journal published articles in the early 1900s describing homework as a destroyer of family life, and the American Child Health Association classified it as a form of child labor.3
Horace Mann's common school reforms had standardized what happened inside the classroom. Homework standardized what happened after.
The debate has never been resolved. Harris Cooper of Duke University, in a widely cited meta-analysis published in 2006, found a positive correlation between homework and academic achievement in high school but little evidence of benefit in elementary school.4
The average American high school student reported spending approximately one hour per day on homework, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. In South Korea and China, the figure was substantially higher, and in Finland, whose students consistently score among the top performers on international assessments, homework loads were among the lowest in the developed world.5