Title: California State Parent Information Resource Center 1
1California State -- Parent Information Resource
Center 1
-
- Innovations that Nurture Success
- in Parent Involvement to Reach Excellence
2CABE Parent Information and Resource Center-1
Rationale for work with parents
- Parent EngagementStudent Success (Academic
Societal) - Families make a difference in the academic and
social lives of children and youth. - Family-strengthening intervention programs
promote family involvement in childrens
development and is a deliberate and sustained
effort to ensure that parents have the necessary
opportunities, relationships, networks, and
supports to raise their children successfully. - The goal is to increase parents abilities to
guide their childrens learning and to create a
community of support from which parents can draw
over time. - Taken from Caspe, M and Lopez, M.E, Harvard
Family Research Project, Lessons from Framily
Strengthening Interventions Learning from
Evidence-Based Practice, October 2006 - (More information email - hfrp_pubs_at_gse.harvard.
edu)
3 Project INSPIRE Program Goals
- To provide statewide leadership in the area of
parent involvement and develop partnerships/collab
orations with state agencies and other
organizations working with parents. - To have parents knowledgeable about high quality
schooling options for their children and with the
leadership skills to take action steps to ensure
their children obtain high quality educational
opportunities, especially parents from
traditionally underserved groups. - To have schools and districts serving
disadvantaged students maintain high quality
parent education/involvement and leadership
programs. - To have parent leaders provide parent leadership
development to other parents and to effectively
participate in local school reform efforts. - To document the above through research.
4What do we know aboutSchool Home Partnerships?
- There is a positive and convincing relationship
between parent involvement and benefits for
students, including improved academic
achievement. - This relationship holds across families of all
economic, racial/ethnic, and educational
backgrounds and for students at all ages. - Karen L. Mapp, Ed.D., Deputy Superintendent,
Boston Public Schools,
5Congress is asking for scientifically based
findings.
- The CA State PIRC-1 is conducting a
quantitative/qualitative study and evaluation of
the services provided to parents to measure what
effect this parent involvement has on their
childrens academic achievement.
6Project INSPIRE Curriculum
- CABEs Project INSPIRE offers a comprehensive
- parent leadership development training program
- Covering the following modules and workshop
topics - Importance of Parental Involvement
- Helping Your Childs Academic Success at Home
- Understanding the American System of Public
Education - State System of Accountability
- State Standards and Special Academic Programs
- Participation in Parent Advisory Committees
- School/Home/Community Connections
- Use of Technology and Online Resources
- Road to the University
- Parental Rights under No Child Left Behind Act
- Early Childhood/ Virtual Pre-K
- Goal Setting for Parents and Students
- Parent Involvement Policies
7Parent Leadership Development
- Level 1 Focus is on one time presentations via
conferences and workshops on some or all modules
as well as other introductory level
presentations. - Short (usually an hour and a half)
- Conferences (one-time presentations)
- Brief series at school or district level (upon
request)
8 Parent Leadership Development
- Level 2 Focus on in-depth continuous leadership
development via all 12 PIRC modules with same
parents (Groups of 25), with substantive
activities to support reflection and development
of individual action plans and parent journals to
support their childrens learning. - Information at a deeper level
- How does this affect my child? My school? My
community? - How can information be shared with others?
- Resources and tools for parents as leaders to
implement school culture change at the
school/district level (e.g., ELAC/DELAC,SSC, DAC,
parent involvement policies etc.)
9Parent Leaders
- Level 3 Focus on graduates from Level 2 PLD as
potential leaders to become parent promotores
to provide leadership development to other
parents in their local communities, presenting
workshops at local conferences to expand PIRC
services to other communities in State. This
involves in-depth coaching and mentoring on group
facilitation, processes, and planning skill
development. - Parents as leaders and decision-makers
- School/District level committees
- State/National organizations
- Community organizations
- Board members
10P
Parent Leadership Development Program
11 Satellite Target Areas
- CABE
- Baldwin Park, Garden Grove, Los Angeles,
Montebello - San Bernardino County
- Adelanto, Fontana , Rialto, San Bernardino City,
Silver Valley Victor Valley - Alameda County Office of Education
- San Jose, Woodland-Yolo County COE, Rio
Linda-Sacramento, Hayward San Francisco - pending
12Program Improvement School DataFor Selecting
Level 2 School Sites
- Student Data
- Total students in school by grade level
- of kids by race/ethnicity
- kids who are ELs by primary language
- kids who have special needs by type of
disability - kids participating in free/reduced lunch program
- kids performing below grade level in reading and
math - School Level Data
- Identified as PI School
- of classroom teachers by grade level
- teachers by teaching credential
- Ancillary teachers by type of assignment
- of administrators and Ancillary Personnel
- Ancillary services available
- of total parents attending parent/teacher
conferences - Parent outreach services and participation
opportunities - Active parent participants
- Parent Resource Center
13Summary Table of Training Assignment
14Research and Evaluation
- The following evaluation data will be collected
- Training Evaluation Forms (pre and post) for all
leadership sessions (Level 1-3) - All Full-Treatment Schools within participating
districts will participate in the following - Parent Interview Protocol
- Principal Interview Protocol
- School Council Interview Protocol
- Student Achievement Data
- Principal Focus Groups
- Teacher Focus Groups
- Parent Focus Groups
- Trainer Focus Groups
15Research and Evaluation
- Process Evaluation the process evaluation will
focus on answering the following questions - Were all project activities (i.e., key
strategies) implemented as planned? (Timeliness
and Quantity) - How well were project activities implemented?
(Quality) - Were people trained as planned? (Timeliness and
Quantity) - school administrators,
- teachers, and
- parent leaders
- How well were participants trained? (Quality)
- school administrators,
- teachers, and
- parent leaders
16Research and Evaluation
- Outcome Evaluation To assess the effectiveness
of realizing project objectives and goals. The
following evaluation questions will be addressed
- To what extent did parent understanding increase
regarding - NCLB requirements?
- To what extent did parents increase
- The type and amount of academic support they
provide to their children? - The type and amount of their involvement in
school governance structures? - Their access to and skills in technology use?
- To what extent did the academic achievement of
students increase as a function of the amount of
increased parental understanding of federal and
State educational reform issues and the type and
amount of their involvement in supporting their
childrens learning?
17CA STATE PIRC-1
- The final outcomes will be
- Improved home-school communication
- Increased student and school academic
- achievement
- Increased parent involvement in school planning
and school review - Increased parental involvement in school
improvement process and - Increased school readiness through early
childhood education.
18Expected Long-term Effects
- Enhanced parent knowledge of
- Educational process (e.g., NCLB, content
standards, instructional programs, rights and
regulations, etc.) - How they can help their children at home
- Increased parent engagement in their childrens
school and community - Increased student academic achievement
- High level of parent satisfaction with quality of
content and usefulness of services - Increased capacity of satellite sites to sustain
services after the funding period
19Accomplishments to Date
- PIRC-Project Inspirethe first grant cycle
(2003-2006) provided direct face-to-face parent
professional development to over 15,857 parents,
disseminated over 204,500 pieces of information
about their childrens education and participated
in radio and TV programs outreaching to an
audience of over 1.3 million people.
20Accomplishments to Date
- In 2006-2007
- Developed performance based Parent Education and
Leadership Development programs (Level 1) and
served 3,338 parents. - The proportion of parents, whose children are
traditionally under served, significantly
exceeded targets 92.7 ethnic minorities, 73.9
ELs, 70.8 Free and Reduced Lunch program
participants, 13.8 special needs, and over
two-thirds attending Program Improvement schools
- Provided Virtual Pre-K (VPK) program to 862
preschool and kindergarten teachers. - Collaborated with local educational agencies
(SBCSS, ACOE, faith-based centers, school
districts, parents, and existing parent education
service providers such as the California PTA) to
determine parent needs and the best means to
deliver services
21Accomplishments to Date
- Designed a randomized longitudinal study of the
effectiveness of the parent education and
leadership program in 18 Treatment and 18
matched control sites from partnering districts - Developed an intensive performance based on-going
coaching and mentoring Parent Education and
Leadership Development program (Level 2)
integrating parents, administrators, and
teachers. - Parents consistently rated the Parent Education
and Leadership Development series as
outstanding/above average exceeding Project
INSPIRE Objectives - a) 92 parents receiving direct services rated
the Quality of Content provided as outstanding
and above average - b) 89 of the parents rated the quality of
learning activities as outstanding/above average
- c) 91 rated the quality of organization and
preparation as outstanding/above average and - d) 90 rated the quality of relevance and utility
of the knowledge to family, job, school, and/or
community efforts as outstanding/above average.
22Parent Information Resource CentersUSDE Office
of Innovation Improvement
- 60 PIRCs nationwide served 2,643,421 parents
- Of parents served 2,618,465 of different racial
and ethnic backgrounds - 60 of parents (1, 537,433) low income
- 57 PIRCS served 645,945 EL parents
- Early Childhood Education presented to 106, 470
parents - Overall PIRCs served 17 Latino parents while CA
PIRC- 1 served 83 Latino parents - Disseminated 2,019,052 information packets
- Had 3,240,768 webpage views
- 13,299,863 Mass Media products to 4,428,646
parents
23California State PIRC-1
- CA State PIRC 1 CABE
- (Lead Agency Fiscal Manager)
- María Quezada, Ph.D.,Director
- CA State PIRC 1 SBCSS
- Erin Bostic-Mason, Co-Director
- CA State PIRC 1 ACOE
- Hector García, Co-Director
24California State PIRC 1Project I.N.S.P.I.R.E.
Contact Information
- CA State PIRC 1 CABE
- ? 626-814-4441
- CA State PIRC 1 SBCSS
- ? 909-386-2696
- CA State PIRC 1 ACOE
- ? 510-670-4235
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