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Parent Involvement

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PARENT INVOLVEMENT Tips, Tools and Strategies for Parents and Professionals Oregon r.i.s.e. Center * Who do we serve Parents of children with disabilities including ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Parent Involvement


1
Parent Involvement
  • Tips, Tools and Strategies for Parents and
    Professionals
  • Oregon r.i.s.e. Center

2
What is the Oregon r.i.s.e. Center
  • We are a statewide organization that encourages,
    educates, and empowers children and young adults
    with disabilities, their parents, family members,
    and professionals to collaboratively achieve
    unlimited success. We are a regionalized model
    with staff living in the area that they serve.

3
Current Programs
Partners Program
Statewide Conferences
Bullying Prevention and Awareness Diversity O
rPTI Transition
IEP Partners Transition Partners Mediation
Partners
Annual Parent Conference Building
Futures Infant and Early Childhood Conference
Special Education Helpline 1-888-891-6784 Monday-F
riday, 9am to 3pm info_at_oregonrisecenter.org
4
Oregon r.i.s.e Center/Parent Training and
Information Program
Coming together is a beginning, Keeping
together is progress, Working together is
success.
Henry Ford
5
Research Shows
  • Parent involvement in children's learning is
    positively related to achievement.
  • The more intensively parents are involved in
    their children's learning, the more beneficial
    are the achievement effects.
  • The most effective forms of parent involvement
    are those which engage parents in working
    directly with their children on learning
    activities in the home.

6
Research shows
  • Considerably greater achievement benefits are
    noted when parent involvement is active--when
    parents work with their children at home,
    certainly, but also when they attend and actively
    support school activities and when they help out
    in classrooms or on field trips, and so on.
  • The earlier in a child's education that parent
    involvement begins, the more powerful the effects
    will be.

7
Five guiding principles for involving parents in
schools
  • Offer parents opportunities in the context of a
    well-organized and long lasting program
  • Allow parents to choose from a range of
    participation options
  • Engage parents in decision making at all
    available levels
  • Intentionally design a parent friendly
    environment
  • Communicate regularly and acknowledge parent
    involvement

8
Offer parents opportunities in the
context of a well-organized and long lasting
program
  • Offer parent participation inservice during the
    year
  • Develop parent involvement programs in
    instruction- at home, school and after school
  • Develop a parent mentoring program that matches
    involved and uninvolved parents
  • Provide professional development opportunities
    for parents

9
Allow parents to choose from a range of
participation options
  • Options need to accommodate schedules,
    preferences and capabilities
  • Offer short term and longer term projects
  • Develop projects that can be done at home and
    brought back to school
  • Assign parent involvement homework assignments
    (family history, daily schedules)

10
Engage parents in decision making at all
available levels
  • Invite parents to be part of classroom as well as
    school or district wide decision making
  • Allow opportunities for parents to complete
    surveys or short feedback forms on specific
    topics
  • Identify ways that parents can take a lead role
    is task forces or meetings
  • Involve families in evaluating the effectiveness
    of family involvement programs

11
Intentionally design a parent friendly
environment
  • Recognize the communitys ethnic, linguistic and
    cultural composition and resources and reflect
    that in school
  • Identify a parent center for parents to use while
    at school
  • Give parents a badge that identifies them as a
    parent partner at school
  • Hire and train a family coordinator

12
Communicate regularly and acknowledge parent
involvement
  • Keep parents informed of their childs
    performance through notes, email, newsletters,
    etc.
  • Be available for quick conversations with parents
    during drop off and pick up time
  • Recognize parent participation in regular
    newsletters
  • Provide social opportunities for teacher and
    parents

.
13
Five Guiding Principles for Parents Who Want to
be Involved
  • Share attributes, strengths and skills that could
    support your childs classroom or school
  • Communicate with your childs teacher
  • Ask to participate in school improvement and
    decision making opportunities
  • Support classroom curriculum and activities at
    home
  • Participate in a positive, collaborative and
    trusting manner

14
Share attributes, strengths and skills that
could support your childs classroom or school
  • Organization, planning skills
  • Clerical, copying
  • Hobbies, crafts, talents, artistic abilities
  • Special expertise

15
Communicate with your childs teacher
  • Email, phone, written notes
  • Attend Parent-Teacher conferences
  • Attend school open house or other social events
  • Before or after school check-ins

16
Ask to participate in school improvement and
decision making opportunities
  • Site council
  • Parent clubs or Parent-Teacher club activities
  • Staff selection committees
  • Special project task forces

17
Support classroom curriculum and activities
at home
  • Make time and space for homework at home
  • Follow through with assignments at home
  • Make phone calls to other parents
  • Prepare art projects or pieces at home for school
    projects

18
Participate in a positive, collaborative and
trusting manner
  • Follow through on tasks or commitments
  • Develop relationships with school personnel
  • Express concerns or needs with a friendly
    demeanor
  • Be considerate of time that teachers have for
    one-on-one conversations
  • Approach participation as adding to the education
    of ALL children

19
Attributes of Successful Partnerships
  • Mutual respect
  • Trust
  • Shared problem solving
  • Common vision and goals
  • Conflicts, when present, are openly acknowledged
    and addressed
  • Focus

20
Elements of Collaboration
  • Inclusive decision making
  • Caring attitudes
  • Sharing information
  • Consideration of cultural factors
  • Trust
  • Considering the whole child
  • Responsive services
  • Families as a resource

21
Getting to the CORE
  • True collaboration occurs with CORE - when these
    ingredients are present
  • Connection
  • Optimism
  • Respect
  • Empowerment

22
CORE
  • Connection
  • Trust building
  • Shared goals
  • Common vision
  • Conflict resolution
  • Optimism
  • Problems are system, not individual, problems.
    (interface)
  • No one person is to blame. (non-blaming,
    solution-oriented)
  • All concerned parties are doing the best they
    can. (non-judgmental, perspective taking)

23
CORE
  • Respect
  • Each person brings different, but equally valid
    expertise to the problem-solving process.
  • Respect requires acceptance of differences,
    especially perceptions about a childs
    performance.
  • Empowerment
  • Both parties have strengths and competencies.
  • Both parties believe they can help.
  • Both parties have a role for which they feel
    comfortable.
  • Both parties see that their efforts make a
    difference in the success of students education.

24
Involving the Uninvolved
  • Newer school practices include
  • Identifying families who are not responding to
    current outreach and making a personal contact.
  • Keeping interaction focused on genuine interest
    in improving the childs school success.
  • Understanding parents goals for their childrens
    education.
  • Being persistent about the importance of a family
    learning environment.

25
The Future of Parent Involvement
  • How will generational changes influence parents
    expectation of participation?
  • How will participation change as a result of the
    economic climate for schools?
  • How can the schools need to do more with less
    and the potential of parent participation create
    a win-win solution?
  • How will you use this discussion to increase
    parent participation at your school or workplace?

26
Contact Information
  • Call us at 503-581-8156 or 1-888-505-2673
  • (toll free in the state of Oregon)
  • Special Ed. Help Line 1-888-891-6784
  • Fax us at 503-391-0429
  • Email us at info_at_oregonrisecenter.org
  • Website- www.oregonrisecenter.org
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