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Awareness of family supervision, respect for parents

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Title: Awareness of family supervision, respect for parents


1
Understanding the Six Types of Family Involvement
  • Keys to Successful
  • Family-School Partnerships

Janie King Family Consultant, Tennessee
Department of Education Julie Sullivan Family
Voices of Tennessee Reggie Curran University of
Tennessee Center for Literacy Studies
2
Defining the Terms
  • What does the research say about family
    involvement?
  • Who is the family of family involvement?
  • What is family involvement?

3
Six Types of Family Involvement
  • PARENTING
  • COMMUNICATING
  • VOLUNTEERING
  • LEARNING AT HOME
  • DECISION MAKING
  • COLLABORATING WITH THE COMMUNITY

4
Parenting
  • Assist families with
  • parenting and child-rearing skills
  • understanding child and adolescent development
  • setting home conditions that support children as
    students at each age and grade level
  • Assist schools in understanding families.

5
Challenges
  • Provide information to all families who want it
    or who need it, not just to the few who attend
    workshops or meetings at the school building.
  • Enable families to share information with schools
    about background, culture, children's talents,
    goals, and needs.
  • Make all information for families clear, usable,
  • age-appropriate, and linked to children's
    success.

6
  • How has SIG responded to the challenges?

7
Main Point
  • Workshop is not only a meeting on a topic held at
    the school building at a particular time, but
    also the content of a topic to be viewed, heard,
    or read at convenient times and varied locations.

8
Possible Results
  • STUDENTS
  • Awareness of family supervision, respect for
    parents
  • Positive personal qualities, habits, beliefs, and
    values taught by family
  • Balance between time spent on chores, other
    activities, and homework
  • Regular attendance, awareness of importance of
    school
  • PARENTS
  • Self-confidence about parenting and knowledge of
    child/adolescent development
  • Adjustments in home environment as children
    proceed through school
  • Awareness of own and others' challenges in
    parenting
  • Feeling of support from school and other parents
  • TEACHERS
  • Awareness of own skills to share information on
    child development
  • Understanding of families' backgrounds, cultures,
    concerns, goals, needs, and views of their
    children
  • Respect for families' diversity, strengths and
    effort

9
Communicating
  • Communicate with families about school programs
    and student progress through effective
    school-to-home and home-to-school communications.

10
Challenges
  • Make all memos, notices, and other print and
    non-print communications clear and understandable
    for all families.
  • Consider parents who do not speak English well,
    do not read well, or need large type.
  • Obtain ideas from families to improve the design
    and content of major communications such as
    newsletters, report cards, and conference
    schedules.
  • Establish an easy-to-use two-way channel for
    communications from school-to-home and from
    home-to-school.

11
  • How has SIG responded to the challenges?

12
Main Point
  • Communications about school programs and student
    progress are not only from school-to-home but
    from home-to-school, parent-to-parent,
    parent-to-child, child-to-parent,
    teacher-to-teacher, etc, etc, etc.

13
Possible Results
  • STUDENTS
  • Awareness of their own progress and skills, and
    knowledge of actions needed to maintain or
    improve grades
  • Informed decisions about courses and programs
  • Awareness of their own role as courier and
    communicator in school-family partnerships
  • PARENTS
  • Understanding school programs and policies
  • Monitoring and awareness of child's progress in
    subjects and skills
  • Responses to student problems
  • Ease of interactions and communications with
    school and teachers
  • High rating of school quality
  • TEACHERS
  • Diversity of communications with families
  • Ability to communicate clearly
  • Use of network of parents to communicate with all
    families
  • Ability to understand family views and elicit
    help with
  • children's progress

14
VOLUNTEERING
  • Improve recruitment, training, work, and
    schedules to involve families as volunteers and
    audiences at the school or in other locations to
    support students and school programs.

15
Challenges
  • Recruit widely for volunteers so that all
    families know that their time and talents are
    welcome.
  • Make flexible schedules for volunteers,
    assemblies, and events to enable working parents
    to participate.
  • Provide training for volunteers, and match time
    and talent with school needs.

16
  • How has SIG responded to the challenges?

17
Main Point
  • Volunteer doesnt just mean those who come to
    school during the day, but also those who support
    school goals and children's learning in any way,
    at any place, and at any time.

18
Possible Results
  • STUDENTS
  • Learn communication skills through interaction
    with other adults
  • Increased skills that are tutored or taught by
    volunteers
  • Awareness of many skills, talents, occupations,
    and contributions of parents and other volunteers
  • PARENTS
  • Self-confidence about ability to work in school
    and with children
  • Awareness that families are welcome and valued at
    school
  • Use of school activities at home
  • TEACHERS
  • Organization, training, and use of volunteers
  • Readiness to involve families in new ways,
    including those who do not volunteer at school
  • Awareness of parents' talents and interests in
    school and children
  • Individual attention to students because of help
    from volunteers

19
Learning at Home
  • Involve families with their children in learning
    activities at home, including homework and other
    curriculum-linked activities and decisions.

20
Challenges
  • Design and implement a regular schedule of
    interactive homework (e.g., weekly or bi-monthly)
    for which students take responsibility to discuss
    important things they are learning with their
    families.
  • Coordinate family-linked interactive homework
    assignments if students have several teachers.
  • Involve families and their children in all
    important curriculum-related decisions.

21
  • How has SIG responded to the challenges?

22
Main Points
  • "Homework" not only means work that students do
    alone, but also interactive activities that
    students share with others at home or in the
    community, linking schoolwork to real life.
  • "Help" at home means how families encourage,
    listen, react, praise, guide, monitor, and
    discuss schoolwork with their children, not how
    they "teach" children school skills.

23
Possible Results
  • STUDENTS
  • Homework completion -skills, abilities, and tests
    scores are linked to homework and class work
  • Positive attitude about homework and school
  • View of parent a similar to teacher and of home
    as similar to school
  • Self-confidence in ability as learner
  • PARENTS
  • Knowledge of how to support, encourage, and help
    student at home
  • Discussions of school, class work, homework, and
    future plans
  • Understanding of instructional program and what
    child is learning in each subject
  • Appreciation of teacher's skill and awareness of
    child as a learner
  • TEACHERS
  • Varied designs of homework, including interactive
    assignments
  • Respect of family time
  • Recognition of helpfulness of single-parent,
    dual-income, and all families in motivating and
    reinforcing student learning

24
Decision Making
  • Include families as partners in school decisions,
    governance, and advocacy through PTA/PTO, school
    councils, committees, and other parent
    organizations.

25
Challenges
  • Include parent leaders from all racial, ethnic,
    socioeconomic, and other groups in the school.
  • Offer training to enable parent leaders to
    develop skills to serve as representatives of
    other families.
  • Include student representatives along with
    parents in decision-making groups.

26
  • How has SIG responded to the challenges?

27
Main Point
  • Decision making means a process of partnership,
    of shared views and actions toward shared goals,
    not just a power struggle between conflicting
    ideas.

28
Possible Results
  • STUDENTS
  • Awareness of representation of families in school
    decisions
  • Understanding that student rights are protected
  • Specific benefits linked to policies enacted by
    parent organizations
  • PARENTS
  • Input into policies that affect children's
    education
  • Feeling of ownership of school
  • Awareness of parents' voices in school decisions
  • Shared experiences and connections with other
    families
  • Awareness of school, district, and state policies
  • TEACHERS
  • Awareness of perspectives of families in policy
    development and school decisions
  • Acceptance of equality of family representatives
    on school committees and in leadership roles

29
Community Collaboration
  • Coordinate resources and services for families,
    students, and the school with businesses,
    agencies, and other groups, and provide services
    to the community.

30
Challenges
  • Solve turf problems of roles, responsibilities,
    funds, and places for collaborative activities.
  • Inform all families and students about community
    programs and services.
  • Assure equal opportunities for students and
    families to obtain services or participate in
    community programs.
  • Match business and community volunteers and
    resources with school goals.

31
  • How has SIG responded to the challenges?

32
Main Point
  • Community means not only the neighborhoods where
    students' homes and schools are located, but also
    all neighborhoods or locations that influence
    their learning and development.
  • Community is rated not only by low or high social
    or economic qualities, but also by strengths and
    talents available to support students, families,
    and schools.
  • Community includes not only families with
    children in the schools, but also all who are
    interested in and affected by the quality of
    education.

33
Possible Results
  • STUDENTS
  • Skills and talents from enriched curricular and
    extracurricular experiences
  • Knowledge and exploration of careers and options
    for future education and work
  • Self-confidence and feeling of value and
    belonging in the community
  • PARENTS
  • Interactions with other families in community
    activities
  • Awareness of community's contributions to the
    school
  • Participation in activities to strengthen the
    community
  • TEACHERS
  • Knowledge and use of community resources to
    enrich curriculum and instruction
  • Knowledge of referral processes for families and
    children with needs for specific services

34
Conclusion
  • Family Involvement is a win-win situation for
    all!
  • Questions??

The content in this presentation is based on the
work of Joyce Epstein. Please visit
www.partnershipschools.org for more information.
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