Title: Steve Zuber, Ombudsman
1School-Family PartnershipsWhat does it mean?
How do we do it?
- Presented by
- Steve Zuber,
Ombudsman - Office of the Education
Ombudsman - Governors
Office -
1-866-297-2597 -
- www.waparentslearn.org
2 About the Presenter
Steve Zuber, M.Ed. is an Ombudsman in the
Office of the Education Ombudsman, a public
service agency within the Governors Office. This
office focuses on educating parents and students
about the public school system, supporting parent
involvement in education, and resolving conflict
between families and schools. Steves career
includes 10 years as a classroom teacher in a
public high school, and 20 years as a high school
counselor. Steve then became the Education
Liaison for Casey Family Programs, and continued
his work with youth, families, and schools.
Steve became an Ombudsman in 2008.
1
3- What is The Office of the Education Ombudsman?
- The Office of the Education Ombudsman
(OEO) is an agency within the Governors Office
created by the WA state legislature in 2006. It
is not part of the public education system. - Our mission is to promote equity in education
and the academic success of students attending
elementary and secondary public schools in the
state of Washington.
4- OEO Services
- We listen. We inform. We help solve problems.
-
- OEO provides services to schools, families
and students statewide. - Informs families, students and others on how to
understand and navigate the education system. - Promotes school-family partnerships for student
success. - Helps resolve issues of concern between families
and schools. - Provides training workshops and presentations to
build the capacity of schools and families to
work together. - Makes recommendations to public officials.
5What do Education Ombudsmen do?
- Ombudsmen are trained problem-solvers who bring
families and educators together to resolve issues
focusing on the best interest of the student
involved. They have extensive knowledge of the
public education system, education laws,
policies, conflict resolution techniques, and
cultural competency. - Ombudsmen can make recommendations but do not
have authority to force schools or school
districts to take a specific action, terminate
school personnel, or remove elected officials
from public office. - Education Ombudsmen are impartial. They do not
advocate for any particular individual.
Education Ombudsmen advocate for fair and
equitable processes that support student academic
success. -
6How is OEO structured?
- OEO has 5 Education Ombudsmen and 2 Information
and Referral - Specialists serving schools and families
statewide. - OEO has two offices. They are open from 800 am
to 500 pm - Seattle Olympia
- Office of the Education Ombudsman Office of the
Education Ombudsman
- 155 NE 100th Street, Suite 210
1110 Capitol Way S, Suite 304 - Seattle, WA 98125-8012
Olympia, WA 98504-0004 - Toll-free number 1-866-297-2597
- Website www.waparentslearn.org
7Taking Stock
- Quality Indicator Worksheets
- From Indiana Department of Education
8WHY BOTHER WITH FAMILY COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT?
9RESEARCH
10 What the research says
National research consistently shows that family
involvement in education is a key element in
student achievement. Among the many types of
family involvement, supporting education at home
is the best predictor of student academic success
and high school completion. This holds true
across families of all ethnicities,
socio-economic levels, and education backgrounds.
Schools must become proficient at
establishing solid partnerships with all
families, and providing them with opportunities
to understand academic goals, and learn how to
support and extend student learning at
home. Mapp, K.L., Henderson, A.T., (2002). A
new wave of evidence The impact of school,
family, and community connections on student
achievement. Austin, TX Southwest Educational
Development Laboratory.
11What the research says
- Family involvement contributed to positive
results for students, including higher
achievement, better attendance, more course
credits earned, fewer disciplinary actions. - Catsambis, (2001). Expanding knowledge of
parental involvement in childrens secondary
education. Social Psychology of
Education,5,149-177. - Simon, (2004). High school outreach and family
involvement. Social Psychology of Education, 7,
185-209.
12 What the research says
- Researchers Hoover-Dempsey and Sandler have
consistently found that there are three variables
that influence parents decision to become
involved in education and in the school. - 1. How confident they feel about their ability
to help their children (Efficacy) - They might
not believe they can make a difference in the
education of their children. - 2. Whether they feel invited and comfortable at
the school (School climate) -They might perceive
schools as cold, hierarchical institutions. And
they might feel the school staff does not treat
them cordially, like them or respect them. -
- 3. How they define their job description as
parents (Role Definition) Families perception
of their role and responsibility in the education
of their children varies due to cultural and/or
socio-economic factors. - Hoover-Dempsey,K.,Sandler,H. (1997.
2001, 2007). Review of Educational Research,
13Further Research
- Source material
- Developing and Sustaining Research-Based Programs
of School, Family, and Community Partnerships
Summary of Five Years of NNPS Research - Joyce Epstein, Ph.D
- Center of School, Family and Community
Partnerships - National Network of Partnership Schools (NNPS)
- John Hopkins University
- September, 2005
14It is the law
- No Child Left Behind
- Section 1118 (c) (3)
- Each school served by the Title I program of
NCLB shall jointly develop with parents for all
children served a school-parent compact that
outlines how parents, the entire school staff,
and students will share the responsibility for
improved student academic achievement and the
means by which the school and parents will build
and develop a partnership to help children
achieve the states high standards.
15Its a Requirement
- OSPI
- Bulletin 042-08, May 23, 2008
- 1 of Title I allocation (.095) must be utilized
for parent-related activities. These activities
are defined as needing to include six specified
elements and are informative activities, not
social gatherings. - One activity specifically calls for educating
school staff on the value and utility of
contributions of parents.
16How do we get families involved?
17We start with Core Beliefs
- 1. All families have hopes and dreams for their
children. - Although in some cases it may not seem so due to
personal and life circumstances. - 2. All families can contribute to their
childrens education - at some level.
- Regardless of their ethnicity, education
or socio-economic status. - 3. Family involvement is a legitimate element of
the public education system. - It contributes to student achievement and the
closing - of achievement gaps.
- 4. Families and school staff are partners in
education. - Education is a shared responsibility.
18We define Partnership
- Partnership a relationship between individuals
or groups that is characterized by mutual
cooperation and responsibility, as for the
achievement of a specified goal. American
Heritage Dictionary-4th Edition - For a partnership to work, there must be mutual
trust and respect, on ongoing exchange of
information, agreement on goals and strategies,
and a sharing of rights and responsibilities.
Ballen and Moles (1994)
19THE PARADIGM SHIFT
20Traditional Concept of Parent Involvement in
Education
- Classroom volunteers
- Cookie bakers
- Chaperones for field trips
- School fundraisers
21REALITY Parent Family Single parents, foster
parents, grandparents, step parents, legal
guardians, extended families, same sex parents,
kinships.
22PARADIGM SHIFT
OLD DAYS
NOW
- BARRIERS
- Culture
- Language
- Socio-economics
- Mobility
- Childcare
- Transportation
- REALITIES
- Strategies sought
- Strategies shared
- Solutions found
23PARADIGM SHIFT
OLD DAYS
NOW
- PARENT INVOLVEMENT
- PERCEIVED AS AN EXTERNAL PROGRAM
- It is not the schools responsibility, parents
need to get involved if they care for their
children. - We count the number of parents attending a
meeting - The funding for the program was cut.
- We have a PTA and they take care of that
- Parents are a necessary evil
- PARTNERSHIPS WITH FAMILIES
- SEEN AS AN INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGY
- Linkage of family involvement
- practices to academic goals
- Focus on student achievement
- Focus on student-centered school-family
partnerships
24PARADIGM SHIFT
OLD DAYS
NOW
- FAMILY PARTNERSHIP SYSTEM IN DISTRICT SCHOOLS
- District and school Family Partnership policy
that includes implementation steps - Planned, coordinated activities connected to
academic goals. - Families as decision-makers
- Culturally relevant activities.
- Organizational structure.
- Partnerships with families seen as the
responsibility of all staff -
- NO SYSTEM IN PLACE IN THE SCHOOL TO INVOLVE
PARENTS - Parent involvement left to one or 2 staff members
in the school. - Activities for parents left to the PTA/PTO.
- Parent involvement seen as a social activity.
- Activities and events organized at the last
minute disconnected from academic goals.
25 WHAT IS FAMILY INVOLVEMENT?
26New Concept of Family Involvement Goes Beyond
Volunteerism
Student Achievement
Families as providers of home conditions that
support student learning
Families as active partners in education
Families as children advocates and school
supporters
27FAMILY INVOLVEMENT
Family involvement is not just another program
being imposed on a school. It is a way of
thinking, acting, and doing business that
recognizes the central role that families play
in their children's education and the power of
working together. Office of the Education
Ombudsman
28Epsteins Framework
- Sampler of Successful Practices
- Parenting Help all families establish home
environments to support children as students. - Communicating Design effective forms of
school-to-home communications about school
programs and childrens progress. - Volunteering Recruit and organize parent help
and support. - Learning at Home Provide information and ideas
to families about how to help students at home
with homework and other curricular activities,
including academic decisions and planning
(Student Learning Plan). - Decision Making Include parents in school
decisions, developing parent leaders and
representatives. - Collaborating with Community Identify and
integrate resources and services from the
community. - Joyce Epstein, John Hopkins University
29- The way schools care about children is reflected
in the way schools care about childrens
families. - If educators see children just as students they
- are likely to see families and communities as
separate from the school. - If educators see students as children, in the
- context of their families, culture, and
communities, they are likely to partner with all
stakeholders in education. - Joyce Epstein, Ph.D.
- Director of the National Network of
Partnership Schools - Johns
Hopkins University, MD
30Resources
- 1. Office of Education Ombudsman
- Information source, pamphlets, trainings on a
variety of topics for setting up a partnership,
for improving a partnership, or to assist you in
continuing a partnership. - At www.waparentslearn.org
- 2. National Congress of Parents and Teachers
(PTA) - National Standards, Goals, and Indicators for
Family-School Partnerships. - Six standards of success are presented, with
suggested goals and action plans. - At www.pta.org
31Resources
- 3. National Network of Partnership Schools.
- Instructions and support in establishing Action
Teams for Partnership. - At www.csos.jhu.edu/P2000/
- 4. Project Appleseed
- Specific hints and action plans for each of the
six steps. - At www.projectappleseed.org
- tab Parent Organizing
-
-
32Resources
- 4. WSSDA Policy No. 4129
- Co-written with the Office of Education
Ombudsman. - Sample form of a district Family Involvement
Standard. - Includes Implementation, Goals, Roles and
Responsibilities.
33Best Practices
- Pasco School District
- Lorraine Landon,
- Parent Education Center
- at www.psd1.org/psd2/index.php?/
- Cle ElumRoslyn School District
- Parent Action Council
- at www.freewebs.com/parentactioncouncil/
-
34Best Practices
- Kennewick School District
- Action Teams for Partnership
- Aligned with National Network of Partnership
Schools - Contact Sarah Del Toro, Parent Involvement
Coordinator 509.222.6462 - At www.ksd.org
- Los Amigos School, Cucamonga School District,
Rancho Cucamonga, CA - Example of Parent Partnership Plan
- at www.cuca.k12.ca.us/la/parents/partnershipsplan
.html
35- The idea of partnership in the time were in is
so essential. - Were in an era where teachers and principals
and school staff need to have honest, genuine
relationships with families from the very diverse
communities in our state. - When the kids see that were a team, we all
win. - Dr. Terry Bergeson
36My Top 3
- 1. All staff accept core beliefs and the shift
from involvement to partnership. - 2. Communication to and with the families.
- 3. Invitation to the families to partnering
events.
37The Office of the Education Ombudsman
- Call us
- Toll-free 1-866-297-2597
- www.waparentslearn.org