Office of Parent, Family, Community Engagement & Faith-Based Partnerships PARENT ENGAGEMENT 101
Mar 31, 2015
Office of Parent, Family, Community Engagement & Faith-Based Partnerships
PARENT ENGAGEMENT 101
Why Should We Want Why Should We Want to Engage Parents?to Engage Parents?
Research Shows thatResearch Shows that
Children whose parents read to them at home recognize letters of the alphabet and write their names sooner that those whose parents do not.
Children whose parents teach them how to write words are able to identify letters and connect them to speech sounds.
Children’s early cognitive development is enhanced by parent supportiveness in play and a supportive cognitive and literacy-oriented environment at home.
Research Shows thatResearch Shows that
Children in grades K-3 whose parents participate in school activities have good work habits and stay on task.
Children whose parents provide support with homework perform better in the classroom.
Low-income African American children whose families maintained high rates of parent participation in elementary school are more likely to complete high school.
from “Family, School & Community Engagement: Reframing the Conversation” a presentation by Anna Hinton Ph.D., Director Parental Options and Information, U.S. Department of Education
Reframing Parent EngagementReframing Parent Engagement
From an individual parent’s or teacher’s
“job” To Shared Responsibility
From Deficit-Based and Adversarial
To Strength-Based and Collaborative
From Random ActsTo systemic approaches from cradle to career c
From Add-On ServicesIntegrated and Purposeful Connection to Learning
Events Driven Learning and Outcomes Driven
ComplianceOwnership and Continuous Improvement
One-Time Project Sustained
Instructional CoreInstructional Core
Content
Teacher
School
Parent(s)Family
Community
Student
Adapted from “Instructional Rounds in Education: A Network Approach to Improving Teaching and
Learning”
Suggestions from National PTASuggestions from National PTA
Involvement programs that link to learning improve student achievement
Speaking up for children protects and promotes their success
ALL FAMILIES can contribute to their children’s success
Community organizing gets results
PTA National Standards for PTA National Standards for School-Family PartnershipsSchool-Family Partnerships
Standard 1: Welcoming all families into the school community
Standard 2: Communicating effectively
Standard 3: Supporting student success
Standard 4: Speaking up for every child
Standard 5: Sharing power
Standard 6: Collaborating with community
“My vision for family engagement is ambitious… I want to have too many parents demanding excellence in their schools. I want all parents to be real partners in education with their children’s teachers, from cradle to career. In this partnership, students and parents should feel connected – and teachers should feel supported. When parents demand change and better options for their children, they become the real accountability backstop for the educational system,” –
Arne Duncan, Secretary of EducationMay 3, 2010
Fortress School (Below Basic)Fortress School (Below Basic)
“Parents don’t care about their children’s education, and they are the main reason the kid’s are failing”
“Parents don’t come to conferences, no matter what we do”
Principal picks a small group of “cooperative parents” to help out
“We’re teachers, not social workers”
“Curriculum and standards are too advanced for these parents”
Come-If-We-Call School (Basic)Come-If-We-Call School (Basic)
Parents are told what students will be learning at the fall open house
Workshops are planned by staff
Families can visit school on report card pickup day
Parents call the office to get teacher-recorded messages about homework
Open-Door School (Proficient)Open-Door School (Proficient)
Parent-teacher conferences are held twice a year
There is an “Action Team” for family engagement
School holds curriculum night three or four times a year
Parents raise issues at PTA meetings or see the principal
Multicultural nights are held once a year
Partnership School (Advanced)Partnership School (Advanced)
Families are actively involved in decision-making Home visits are made to every new family
Families are seen as partners in improving educational outcomes
All family activities are connected to student learning
There is a clear, open process for resolving problems
Parents and teachers research issues together
The Joining Process*The Joining Process*
Welcoming
Honoring
Connecting
* from Mapp, K.L. 2003. “Having Their Say: Parents Describe Why and How They Are Engaged in Their Children's Learning.” School Community Journal, Volume 13, Number 1
WelcomingWelcoming
Families are made to feel at home, comfortable, and a part of the school community.
HonoringHonoring
Family members are respected, validated and affirmed for any type of involvement or contribution they make.
ConnectingConnecting
School staff and families put children at the center and connect on education issues of common interest designed to improve educational opportunities for the children.
Know – Positive Assumptions Know – Positive Assumptions Yield Positive ResultsYield Positive Results
Assume ALL parents love their children
Assume ALL children can learn
DON’T Assume that parents KNOW how to help their children or understand that their child needs help.
Expect parents to be involved
Clarify expectations for parents from the beginning
Walk the Talk – Actions Speak Walk the Talk – Actions Speak Louder than WordsLouder than Words
Be prepared COMMUNICATE Have procedures for addressing parent
concerns in a timely manner Plan for volunteers Value ALL families and SHOW students that
their families are valued Expect ALL staff to invest in building
school/family partnerships
Effective CommunicationEffective Communication
Attributes of Effective Communication
Barriers to Effective Communication
Effective CommunicationEffective Communication
Attributes of Effective Communication
Barriers to Effective Communication
Common goals Trust Respect Consistency Knowledge and
understanding of your partner of the situation
Assumptions
Cultural differences
Lack of follow-through
Putting yourself in the center
Additional Resources
Pennsylvania Parent Information Resource Center (www.center-school.org/pa-pirc/)
Center for Schools and Communities (www.center-school.org)
The Family Involvement Network of Educators (FINE) (www.gse.harvard.edu/ hfrp/projects/fine.html)