Title: Parent Leadership
1 Parent Leadership
- Presenters
- Vicky Roper, Director, Kansas Childrens Service
League - B. J. Gore, Supervisor, Kansas Childrens Service
League
2Parent Leadership
-
- Parent leadership occurs when parents
actively, creatively and resourcefully contribute
to promoting and developing the well being of
their families and their communities. - Through such involvement, parents can build
interdependent relationships with family service
providers and other family-focused agencies that
seek to enhance the quality of life for families
and children.
3Strength-based Approach
- Parent leadership is a strength-based approach
to family support that is founded on the belief
that parents are knowledgeable about the families
and communities and can provide valuable insight
into programmatic and community changes to
benefit children and families.
4 Parent Leadership Model
- Shared leadership
- Parent engagement
- Parent involvement
- Parent encouragement
- Family support
- A parent leader represents the needs and
perspective of the parents to an agency.
5Who Can Be Parent Leaders
- Biological parent
- Grandparent raising a grandchild
- Relative raising a child
- Adoptive parent
- Foster parent
- Non-relative caregiver
6Principles of Parent Leadership
- Parents/professionals are equal partners
- No one has all the solutions
- Mutual respect, trust and open-mindedness
- Collective action based upon shared vision,
ownership and accountability - Consensus building vs. democratic process
7Parent Leadership Takes
- Time, resources and patience
- An organization-wide commitment
- An understanding and acceptance of the impact
parents can have on their children, family and
community
8Guidelines for Parent Leadership
- Commitment from program and agency
- Be clear and honest in your commitment to
parents make the commitments in writing. - Ask parents for straight feedback about your
agencys performance in parent engagement. - Use feedback from parents to look at
agency/program services and support. Information
from parents can help to continually improve
services and support offered. - Secure appropriate resources and funding levels.
9Gaining Support From Decision Makers
- Inform
- Explain
- Explore
- Partner
- Train
10Common Parent Fears
- I wont fit in.
- They wont value my input.
- Nothing will change.
- Ill have to take time off work.
- What is expected from me?
- I wont know what they are talking
- about or what they are doing.
- I have nothing to offer!
11Common Agency Fears
- Have to change work expectations to meet the
level of the parent - They will have past issues with the agency and
see the issues as an agenda. - Need to make too many concessions to function
- Other agencies will not accept their input as
valid. - Confidentiality issues
- No place for them in our hierarchical system
- You cant control them.
12Benefits for Families
- Improves services for families
- Provides opportunity to affect meaningful change
- Increases confidence in ability to affect change
- Provides opportunities to network with other
families and providers
13Benefits for Families
- Models community involvement and empowerment for
own children and family - Parents develop advocacy skills
- Develops effective communication skills
- Increases sense of personal power
- Offers leadership role for other families
14Benefits for Providers, Programs Agencies and
Communities
- Enhances relationships between families and
providers - Increases responsiveness to family-identified
needs - Improves the quality of programs and services
- Keeps program relevant and realistic
15Benefits for Providers, Programs Agencies and
Communities
- Increases visibility of and respect for program
in the community - Develops a fresh perspective on how services
should be delivered - Improves ability to accomplish mission
- Increases appreciation of various cultures
16Developing Parent Leadership
- Interview and select parent volunteers with the
same process and care you would with any other
volunteer. - - KBI
- - CANIS
- - Reference Checks
- Provide a written job description.
- Have a formal system for supervision and
mentoring. - Offer opportunities for parent leaders to support
each other. - Time! Time!! Time!!!
17Nurturing Parent Leaders
- Provide a mentor.
- Help them overcome the barriers to participation.
- Prepare them in advance with who will be there
how will others be dressed what will happen at
the meeting what will their role be. - Provide role modeling opportunities.
18Parent Leadership Roles
- Members of task forces
- Board members
- Co-trainers for staff development
- Mentors for other families
- Grant reviewers
- Participants in quality improvement initiatives
- Public speakers
- Advocacy
19Benefits of a Parent Leadership Structure For the
Agency
- Supports aggressive program expansion and
on-going program management - Supports best practice standards for
supervision and training - Incorporates leadership development for members
of the network
20Benefits for the Parents
Protective Factors The Center for the Study of
Social Policy Strengthening Families Imitative
- Nurturing and attachment of children
- Knowledge of effective parenting
- Knowledge of child and youth development
- Parental resilience
- Social connections and solid support for parents
21Evidence Based Research Studies Circle of Parents
- Circle of Parents
- Florida, Minnesota and Washington
- Increase in
- 80 in self-management skills
- 70 in parent-child relationship
- 70 in support systems awareness and use
- Circle of Parents
- Kansas (Latino Families)
- Increase in
-
- 78 in child development
- 74 in positive parenting skills
- 86 knowledge in crisis situations and problem
solving
22Administrative Considerations
- Our budget is a reflection of our values. To
budget - for Parent Leadership include funding
for - Travel to Meetings, Training
- Child Care During Meetings, Training
- Food for Meetings, Training
- Registration, Travel and Incidentals to
Conferences - Recognition Events
- Training Activities
- Background Checks
- Marketing Materials
23Points to Remember!
- Agencies benefit from raising the consumer
voice. It makes us better. It keeps us current
and meeting needs. We need this lens. - Parent leadership is a tool in the prevention
toolbox. By taking risks to get out of their
comfort zone and learn new skills while on this
parent leadership ladder, parents will often take
risks to better their own lives and advocate for
their children and their family. - This is a strengths-based, empowerment model.
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