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Research on Parent Involvement

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Both parents and teachers experience 'burnout' when all pressures are placed on them ... Teachers are unsure of how to involve parents ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Research on Parent Involvement


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Research on Parent Involvement
  • Effects of Family and Parent Engagement
  • School attendance increases
  • Better attitudes about school
  • Discipline problems decrease
  • Children go on to higher education
  • Good Types of Involvement Programs
  • Emphasize academics
  • Monitor involvement at home
  • How to Involve Parents
  • Relationships are important Build trust and
    respect

3
Benefits of Involving Parents
  • Educating children is a tough job no one entity
  • can do it alone!
  • More can be accomplished as a team
  • Both parents and teachers experience burnout
    when all pressures are placed on them
  • Establish an equal partnership so everyone
    participates to help the child learn

4
Tension between Parents and Teachers
  • Parents are required to leave their child with a
    stranger all day
  • Schools must work to overcome barriers
  • Difference of cultural backgrounds
  • Parents who do not speak English
  • Schools can take the first step to link parents
    into education

5
School Resistance to Parent Involvement
  • Teachers are unsure of how to involve parents
  • Few opportunities to learn how to communicate
    with parents
  • Isolationist view
  • Classrooms are private - only the teacher and
    students belong inside
  • May need encouragement to invite parents in
  • More training must be provided on parent/teacher
    communication

6
Avoiding Adversarial Relationships
  • Book Including Every Parent, Patrick OHearn
    Elementary School
  • Set small goals
  • Improvement takes time and effort
  • Leadership of principal is key
  • Walk the walk of collaboration, communication,
    welcoming
  • Show willingness to communicate
  • Employ a welcoming philosophy
  • Examine school attitudes about parents
  • Offer training for parents showing them how to
    help their children academically

7
Implications of Laws
  • No Child Left Behind and Put Reading First
    Initiative
  • Reading First was established as part of NCLB
  • Requires parent access to information
  • Only available in certain schools, but serves as
    model for all
  • Effective administrators have always involved
    parents now schools are accountable for parent
    involvement
  • Tied to funding
  • Adds level of accountability
  • Ensures that parents in failing schools have
    access to information and services
  • Encourages rich partnership between parents and
    schools

8
Impact of Parent Involvement on Reading
  • Read Boston Initiative
  • Parents sign reading contract and read to kids
    3-4 times per week
  • Result gains in reading scores
  • Literacy can be the key to involvement
  • Parents want to know how to help

9
Parent Involvement Under NCLB
  • Title I Schools must
  • Inform parents of services, programs and progress
  • Offer school choice program
  • Policy emphasizes parental rights and
    responsibilities
  • Allows parents to be better informed
  • Encourages advocacy

10
Building Motivation for Partnerships
  • As a teacher/administrator
  • Share success stories with colleagues
  • Models, examples from other schools can prompt
    discussion
  • Teachers and principals with vision can bring
    about change!
  • As a parent
  • Research your childs problem
  • Be informed
  • Engage in positive dialogue with school faculty

11
Video
  • Thomas Johnson School, Baltimore, MD
  • Childrens Literacy Initiative
  • Guidance and leadership from principal
  • Expected parent involvement
  • Early Literacy program requires involvement
  • Evident when parents are/are not involved
  • Parents of absentees are called/visited each
    morning
  • Message to parents School matters!

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Overcoming Excuses
  • Expect involvement both from parents and schools
  • Reflect on practices at home and school
  • Identify the factors that impact reading
    achievement (positively and negatively)
  • Shared mission Make reading a priority in school
    and at home
  • Set clear goals, develop a plan
  • Analyze data
  • Create incentives for involvement
  • Partnership with public library rewards kids
    for visiting
  • Self knowledge and examination of current system
    is crucial for success

13
Involving Parents and the Community
  • Call upon existing strengths within the community
  • Use data to influence involvement
  • Student surveys about reading habits at home
  • Advice for principals
  • Examine school culture
  • Identify areas of strength and weakness
  • Capitalize on strengths and work to reduce
    barriers to reading proficiency

Children are a communitys greatest resource
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Teachers
  • Find what works through research and experience
  • Examine practice within and across grade levels
  • Standardize practices
  • What works? What is based in research?
  • Get the rest out of the way
  • Encourage collaboration
  • Create opportunities for discussion
  • Set aside time during the work day to allow the
    staff to discuss methods and coordinate vision

15
Encouraging Parent Involvement
  • Involve community organizations
  • Go where the parents are church, grocery store,
    local businesses, etc.
  • Establish family room
  • Supply books
  • Talk to parents
  • Offer workshops
  • Allow classroom observation
  • Share strategies both parents and teachers have
    found
  • Encourage communication of ideas
  • Makes parents feel involved and gives teachers
    valuable information

16
Making it Work in Your School
  • Importance of building relationships
  • Hands-on approach effective in building trust
  • Home visits, direct contact with families
  • Reach out to parents
  • Schools can be intimidating for parents
  • Schools should take the first step in
    communication
  • Welcome parent ideas
  • Acknowledge parents unique knowledge about their
    child
  • View as whole-school approach, not just an add-on

17
Parent Views
  • Make sure parents are welcome in educational
    realm, not just in school building
  • Classroom observation
  • True participation in learning
  • Many parents want to do more than help at
    fundraisers
  • Provide guidance for helping struggling readers
  • Be a model for parents
  • Show parents techniques to use at home
  • Invite parents to be engaged in content

18
Video
  • Miras Family, San Jose, CA
  • Foundation for reading success begins early
  • Everyday opportunities to learn concepts of
    print
  • Grocery Stores
  • Shopping Lists
  • Letter magnets at home
  • Daily reading time
  • Child learns how books are used, how reading
    works
  • Message to child Reading is a pleasure!

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Ideas for Parents of Struggling Readers
  • Look to schools first
  • Talk with classroom teachers
  • Become informed on the reading process
  • Understand your role
  • Three aspects coach, monitor, and advocate
  • Set TV limits at home
  • Provide good books
  • Follow childs interests
  • Encourage reading throughout adolescence

20
Understanding the Parent Perspective
  • Parents need encouragement to become partners
  • Trained teachers and collaborative school
    community can help bring parents in
  • Parents feel up against a system
  • May not understand it feel that it doesnt
    always work in their childs best interest
  • Need to learn the system and understand how to
    make it work for their child
  • Engage parents in a dialogue
  • Provide models for the home/school relationship
  • Parents can serve as models for other parents

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Tips for Parents
  • Know about your child, how things are going at
    school
  • Ask for specific information
  • Reading level, progress, screening information
  • Explanation of data
  • Ways you can help
  • Available services

22
Role of Parent in Early Intervention
  • Contact the teacher right away to discuss
    problems
  • Notice signs of struggles at home
  • Child avoids reading aloud
  • Child struggles to recognize common words
  • Provide a reading environment at home
  • Be a coach as the child learns how to read
  • Model at school
  • Often, parents of struggling readers had problems
    in school themselves
  • Should be encouraged to take an active, positive
    role

23
Bringing Parents In
  • Give parents power
  • Involve them as a positive change agent
  • Organizations for parents
  • Parent Teacher Association
  • Institute for Responsive Education
  • Parents for Public Schools
  • Southwest Educational Development Laboratory
  • Parent liaison
  • Contact point between families and school
  • Set up workshops, create opportunities for parent
    involvement
  • Can be less intimidating for other parents

24
Getting Information to Parents
  • Pass along information to parents from national
    organizations
  • Tools, tips, resources
  • Find small instructional activities that kids can
    practice at home
  • Speeds progress in school
  • Offers parents area of engagement that is
    purposeful and that matters
  • Share with parents
  • Childs current reading level
  • Childs expected reading level
  • Materials that parent can use at home to
    reinforce class work

25
Video
  • Neiles Family, Raleigh, NC
  • Phonemic Awareness
  • Knowledge that words are made of individual
    sounds
  • Parent involvement
  • Word games
  • Rhyming games
  • Reading with children

26
Helping Struggling Readers
  • Research is providing more information on how to
    help kids
  • Communicate research-based methods to teachers
    through professional development
  • Shift from seeing parent involvement as an add-on
    to a whole-school improvement strategy
  • Make parents aware of their important role in
    literacy development

27
Involving Experienced Teachers
Overcoming Resistance to Change
  • Provide professional development
  • Give everyone in the school responsibility to
    communicate with parents
  • Teachers, aides, counselors, administrators,
    nurses
  • Administrator should set expectation, model
    strategies
  • Ease tension, anxiety about parent relationships
  • Provide information on how to conduct conferences
  • Teachers want a positive relationship with
    parents!

28
Talking to Teachers
Tips for Parents
  • Use data to discuss academic progress
  • Keeps focus on child improvement
  • Reduces sense of personal attack, blame
  • Use partnership language to build trust
  • Express willingness to help
  • Ask for strategies to use at home

29
Helping a Struggling Reader
without a formal reading program
  • Advocate for use of a formal reading program
  • Programs are research-based
  • Help teachers address all areas of reading
    development
  • Advocate for early literacy screening
  • Meanwhile
  • Coach child at home, but advocate for change
  • Parents should supplement, but not replace,
    school curriculum
  • Become involved in the parent council at school
  • Organize with other parents to address concerns

30
Benefits of Student-Led Conferences
  • Portfolio works are selected by the student
  • Student reflects and communicates ideas
  • Parents and teachers join in discussion with
    student
  • Leads to self- advocacy later in life for the
    child
  • Articulation of goals
  • Understanding of progress

31
Involving Busy Parents
  • Information does not have to stay at school
  • Hold events at community locations grocery
    store, nail shop
  • Go where the parents are!
  • Make it easy for parents to attend events
  • Provide transportation, food
  • Encourage parents to make school a priority

32
Difficulty Communicating with a Teacher
  • Remain professional
  • Your child is watching the interaction and could
    suffer if it is conducted poorly
  • Contact a school guidance counselor to mediate
  • Improve relationship with the teacher
  • Do not give up or go over the teachers head
  • If necessary, involve principal

33
Working with Non-Reading/Non-English Speaking
Parents
  • Have child read to parents for practice
  • Involve extended family
  • Grandparents, siblings
  • Use whatever reading material is in the home
  • Comic books, cookbooks
  • Provide audio-taped stories for child
  • Tell stories to children
  • You do not have to be a reader to encourage
    literacy
  • Encourage school to provide GED/ESL classes for
    parents

34
Balancing Structured Curriculum and Parent
Concerns
  • Be creative
  • Find ways to integrate literature across content
    areas
  • Encourage reading at home
  • Use the school library for independent reading
    books
  • Encourage parents to take their children to
    public libraries for reading at home

35
Working with Demanding Parents
  • Channel parent energy
  • Use parents as a resource for the school
  • Ask parents questions, make them partners
  • Simply asking a parent questions about their
    child can make them feel useful and involved
  • Involve parents in a positive role in the school
  • Encourage them to serve on the parent council
  • Turn demanding parents into advocates for the
    school!

36
Final Thoughts
  • Parents are powerful
  • Village concept engage community and families
  • Parent and schools working together can lighten
    the burden and benefit students
  • Parents can demonstrate the value of literacy
    without being a reading teacher themselves
  • Parents Advocate for early literacy screening to
    avoid reading problems later!

37
Thanks for watching!
For more information, visit www.ReadingRockets.or
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