Title: Partnering with Parents The Empowerment Factor
1Partnering with Parents The Empowerment Factor
2Our Agenda
- The Dynamics of Parenting Teens
- How Parent Empowerment links to Student Success
for Teens. - Effective Communication Strategies
- Parental Development and Family Systems
- Parent Empowerment Principles
3Parents Biggest Fear Life and Death
- My biggest fear is that she makes it out of
her teens ALIVE and without problems that will
follow her for the rest of her life.
Source ChangeWorks Publishing Consulting
4Whats the hardest part of parenting teenagers
today?
Most of society seems to be giving a
diametrically opposed message to the ones I am
giving my kids. The outside message from
films, TV, music and the media seems to be
have sex, drink and take drugs, resort to
violence to solvedisputes,treat partners badly,
and never confide in your parents. Oh, and
driving fast is cool, too.
5The hardest part is
maintaining the values in our house despite the
daily deluge of inappropriate messages.
keeping them safe and letting them experience
life for themselves...
trying to place yourself between Gestapo and
friend.
managing their defiance
6Parents say
- Being a parent is wonderful.
- I wouldnt trade it for the world.
- 96 agreed
- Source Public Agenda A Lot Easier Said Than
Done
7One dad said
I want to know where the manual is. When you
get a piece of electronics it comes with a book.
8Parents want to teach values
- to be honest, courteous, reliable
- to have self-discipline, good nutrition,
religious faith - to always do the best in school
- to save money and spend carefully
- Source Public Agenda A Lot Easier Said Than
Done
9In actuality
- There is a sizeable gap between what parents say
they want to teach their kids, and what they do
teach them.
10- TRAIT VALUED SUCCESS
UNSUCCESSFUL - Disciplined 83 34 49
- Thrifty 70 28 42
- Honest 91 55 36
- Academic focus 82 50 32
- Good nutrition 68 40 28
- Good manners 84 62 22
- Source Public Agenda A Lot Easier Said Than
Done
11Parents Universal Truths
- Children do best when parents set limits and
enforce them. - Sometimes kids must make mistakes and learn from
the consequences. - Parents have to pick their battles.
- Being too strict can backfire.
- Things are harder when both parents have to
work.
- Source Public Agenda A Lot Easier Said Than
Done
12Trying their best.
- The parents we interviewed are anything but
thoughtless about how they ought to raise their
children. If at times they seem riddled with
ambivalence and tension, conflicted about how
best to respond to a given situation, they also
convey how seriously they are struggling to
figure out how to balance their desire to raise
independent, self-disciplined youngsters while
protecting them from the dangers lurking.
- Source Public Agenda A Lot Easier Said Than
Done
13Sometimes, parenting teenagers feels
paradoxical.
14Parents feel conflicted between
- Pressuring their kids for academic success
- Their desire to make children more self-reliant
15Paradox
- Parents feel disconnected from their teenagers
even though they are trying to stay connected to
them. - Parents feel dis-empowered when their teens push
away. - Parents often feel like failures when they have
less control over their teens. This tends to make
parents withdraw more and not seek the help
they may need.
16PARENT EMPOWERMENT PRINCIPLE
- Begin with the assumption that parents care.
17PARENT EMPOWERMENT PRINCIPLE
- Validation,
- encouragement and support
- is vital.
18Parents complain about
- Culture and media
- Balancing guidance and freedom
- Teaching healthy attitudes
- Communication
19PARENT EMPOWERMENT PRINCIPLE
- Risky behavior is
- viewed in a
- broad context.
20How Parent Empowerment Links to Student Success
21What influences parents involvement?
- Beliefs
- what parents believe they are supposed to do in
relation to their childrens education - Welcoming attitude
- from school and students
- Efficacy
- parents confidence in their ability to provide
the necessary help for their children
Source A New Wave of Evidence The Impact of
School, Family and Community Connections on
Student Achievement annual synthesis 2002 (44)
22Effective family involvement processes
Source Harvard Family Research Project
23From one middle school principal
- We have parents who are
- powerful but not
- empowered.
24Confidence
Empowered Parents
Knowledge
Connections
25Communicating Effectively
- Effective communication with parents is
- Personal
- One-to-one
- One-to-many
- Two-way
- Frequent advertising rule is 5 7 contacts
- Multi-channelprint, e-mail, website, signs,
newsletters, phone calls
26PARENT EMPOWERMENT PRINCIPLE
- Effective communication
- is created intentionally
-
27Discuss/Update Your Plan
- Do you/how do you recognize, validate and support
the emotional experiences of parents? - How might you improve in this area?
- To effectively empower parents requires a broad
spectrum of attitudes and activities. List the
most important - Attitudesand what you can do to foster them
- Activitieswhat needs to be added to your plan?
- How can you help parents gain the knowledge and
the connections that are so vital?
28- Parental Development
- and
- Family Systems
29Parental DevelopmentParental Awareness Measure
- Level I
- Me Firstfocus is on parents needs
- Level II
- Follow the Rulesfocus on traditions
- Level III
- We are Individualsfocus on childs needs
- Level IV
- Living and Growing Togetherfocus on balancing
childs and parents needs
30Parenting Process Parental Thinking
- Some parents accept everything from authority
figures. - Some accept only ones own concrete experiences,
feelings, beliefs - Some can synthesize and combine ideas from all
perspectives.
31Family Systems Characteristics
- Boundaries
- Roles
- Rules
- Climate
- Equilibrium
32Adult Learning Principles
- Adults draw on their own experiences
- Adults learn best when adult learning strategies
are involved - -Listening
- -Assessing
- -Dialogue
- -Problem-solving
- -Reflection
33PARENT EMPOWERMENT PRINCIPLES
- Begin with the assumption that parents care.
- Validation, encouragement and support is vital.
- Risky behavior is viewed in a broad context.
- Effective communication is created intentionally.
- Address adults in a manner that respects their
varying developmental stages, learning styles and
their adult learning needs.
34Resources from ChangeWorks
Tips booklets
Audio programs, podcasts,
Parent discussion group program
Research
Websites Free articles, tips,
newsletter www.ParentingTeensInfo.comwww.PleaseSt
optheRollercoaster.com 1-800-234-2150