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Collaborative Leadership in Promoting Family/Community Involvement

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Title: Collaborative Leadership in Promoting Family/Community Involvement


1
Collaborative Leadership in PromotingFamily/Comm
unity Involvement
2
Learning Outcomes
  • Students are able to
  • Describe the importance of collaborative
    leadership in promoting family/community
    collaboration
  • The importance of group process in enhancing
    participation
  • Differentiate participation and collaboration
    according to context
  • Ways to promote advocacy roles among
    parents/community members
  • Discuss effective ways to deal with parents
    rights

3
Collaborative Leadership in PromotingFamily/Commu
nity Involvement
  • Students are able to
  • Describe the importance of collaborative
    leadership in promoting family/community
    involvement
  • Recognize the importance of group process in the
    leadership process
  • Identify various ways to promote advocacy and
    governance in leadership role among
    parents/community members
  • Recognize the importance of evaluating
    involvement programs for improvement

4
Movement Favoring Family/Community Involvement
  • The school-based movement of late 1960s and
    1970s
  • School-based management means locating the power
    to make decisions about budget, personnel, and
    school organization and curriculum at the school
    level
  • Goals 2000
  • As educational leaders in providing leadership in
    community or collective collaboration in
    site-based management of schools
  • Teachers need leadership skills to encourage
    problem solving and critical thinking when served
    on site-based or community-based committees
  • To improve academic achievement in the,
    particularly in poor and minority districts

5
Leadership Roles Of Administrators in
Family/Community Involvement
  • As a morale builder
  • Enabling staff members to feel positive,
    enthusiastic and secure in their work with
    children and parents
  • The development of principal-parent relationship
  • Program designer in implementing programs that
    involve parents
  • Program coordinator for teachers initiating
    family involvement programs
  • Developing site-base management and leading
    advisory councils and decision-making committees

6
Possible Roles of Parents in SchoolPrincipals
Leadership in Making a Difference
  • Parents as
  • As spectators
  • As temporary volunteers
  • As volunteer resources
  • As employed resources
  • As policy makers
  • As teachers of their own children

7
The Importance Group Processes
  • Principals/teachers who can support and motivate
    group can accomplish the goals of the group
    without undermining the responsibilities of the
    participants
  • It helps if participants have a basic
    understanding of group processes and
    communication, whether the group is led by
    students, parents, principals or professionals
  • Parent involvement includes shared goal setting
    and decision making

8
Parent Education
  • Belief in the autonomy of parents inspires the
    promotion of their decision-making abilities and
    allows them to be full partners in the education
    process
  • Active parent collaboration means including the
    parents in mutual accountability beyond the
    bureaucratic control

9
The Continuum of Parent Education
  • Parent leader with no training
  • Parent leader with leadership training
  • Parent leader with a structured curriculum
  • Parent leader with professional support
  • Professional leader with parent support
  • Professional teacher

10
  • Parent leader with no training
  • Unstructured meetings with no goals, curriculum
    or trained leader
  • Parent leader with leadership training
  • Meetings led by leaders to get comments, solve
    problem, study an issue, or become better
    acquainted
  • Parent leader with a structured curriculum
  • Meetings led by lay leader who follow a
    curriculum devised by professional, such as
    Active Parenting, Parent Effective Training (PET)

11
  • Parent leader with professional support
  • Meetings led by parent or professional that
    involve members and respond to their concerns
    with professional support.
  • Professional leader with parent support
  • Meetings led by a professional, with
    participation by lay members
  • Professional teacher
  • Meetings called, led, directed, and controlled
    by the professional, with members of the audience
    as observers only

12
Determining Needs of Families/CommunityThrough
Needs Assessment
  • Generic Steps
  • Meet with group of parents representatives of
    diverse ethnic/socioeconomic levels within the
    community
  • Jot down the issues that interest or concern them
    (brainstorming is strongly recommended)
  • Use reports from reports or Gallup polls to
    facilitate the session
  • Construct a need-assessment tool listing possible
    topics or format for parents
  • Formulate questionnaire and disseminate them to
    adults in the school/community
  • Choose the items that received the most requests
  • Develop programs to meet the needs of the
    community

13
Examples of Issues FromPhi Delta Kappa/Gallup
Poll (2001)
  • Lack of discipline
  • Lack of financial support
  • Fighting, violence and drugs
  • Overcrowded schools
  • The use of drugs and dope
  • The difficulty in obtaining high-quality teachers

14
Guidelines for Brainstorming
  • Choose a recorder and a facilitator
  • Encourage all members to contribute ideas for
    programs (round robin is suggested for specific
    reasons)
  • Past successful/exemplary programs can be used as
    guide
  • Write ideas on chalkboard, white board,
    newsprint, or OHP
  • Caution members not to judge any suggestions good
    or bad at this point
  • Have members choose (in writing) three to six
    ideas that interest them most
  • Develop your program from the interest that
    received the most votes (ranking process)

15
Problem-Solving Format
  • Recognition of the problem state the
    problem/hypothesis
  • Example Does violence on the television impact
    our children and cause them more violence in the
    country?
  • Understand the problem
  • Data collection
  • Identify resources and read them before meeting
  • Analysis of the problem
  • Conclusion and summary

16
What Are Looking For in Leadership Training?
  • Leaders personality
  • Ability to think and act quickly
  • Ability to get along with others
  • Respect for the opinions of others
  • Willingness to remain in the background
  • Freedom from prejudice
  • Leaders knowledge and skills
  • Knowledge of discussion methods
  • Knowledge of the opinions of authorities
  • Skills in asking questions

17
Collaboration Vs. Participation
  • Collaboration is a consultative process at best,
    where the new actors share the burden with the
    traditional administrators of education and help
    to improve conditions of the classroom teaching,
    to enhance the effectiveness and efficiency of
    schools, and to deliver their services, without
    becoming quite a partner in the process

18
  • Participation would add intervention into the
    process the ability to get involved in
    governance, policy and administration to serve
    as equal partner in planning, managing, and
    evaluation, and to gain power (empowerment)
    through the process

19
Levels of Collaboration/Participation
  • Parent as active partner and educational leader
    at home and at school
  • Parent as decision maker
  • Parent as advocate for the school
  • Parent actively involved as volunteer or paid
    employee
  • Parent as a liaison between school home and
    school to support homework
  • Parent as supporter of the educational goals of
    the school
  • Parent as recipient of education and support
  • Parent as member of parent educational classes
  • Parent as representative and activist in the
    community
  • From low to high

20
Conditions and Factors Facilitating Collaboration
  • Organizational norms
  • Open and ready for change
  • Higher level of commitment to change
  • Trust and support NGO/other agencies activities
  • Structures and procedures
  • Decentralization and local autonomy to adapt
  • Committees and councils
  • A focus on process
  • Publicity
  • Knowledge, skills and attitude

21
Characteristics of Effective Collaboration
  • Principals, teachers, child-care providers,
    staff, and parents who believe in parent/family
    involvement
  • School and child-care centers that encourage
    parent collaboration by encouraging parents to
    participate at the level that best fits their
    interests and time
  • An open-door policy and climate that respond to
    parent concerns with effective communication
  • Children, new to the school or center, are paired
    with a classmate to help the new child become a
    class member more easily
  • Conferences are held at times that make it
    possible and convenient for parents to attend
  • A feeling of family, schools, center, and
    community joined together in a collaborative
    manner to support childrens health and
    educational growth

22
Problems of Collaboration
  • A lack of resources in terms of finances,
    personnel, labor and time
  • The inability or resistance of institutions and
    individuals to change
  • Organizational and administrative obstacles
  • Political and cultural constraints
  • Inherent weaknesses of other partners
  • The surrender of education to schools
  • The lack of standard and invariable approaches to
    collaboration

23
Research Findings by McLaughlin and Shield, 1987)
  • The general conclusion is that most strategies
    for parent involvement have not been carried out
    as they were intended. Parent advisory councils
    have been pro forma, giving parents little
    genuine involvement in the decision-making
    processes The hesitancy of school
    administrators to establish meaningful advisory
    roles for parents. Low income parents have shown
    themselves unwilling to serve on paper councils
    or to spend time in non-substantive roles

24
Implications from Jennifer Wees Study
  • The lack of school-based parent involvement
    practices suggests that schools need to take
    leadership role in soliciting and involving
    parents in the various parent involvement
    programs

25
Rational Behind the Advocacy Move
  • When children perceive that the school is an
    extension of or substitute for their families,
    academic performance is enhanced
  • Parents choice among schools and school options
    not only improve academic achievement, but also
    increase parents satisfaction and teacher morale
  • Parents today are more consumer-oriented, well
    educated, and activist minded in their
    interactions with teachers and other school
    personnel
  • Advocacy, though time consuming and difficult,
    when supported by the best available data, is
    helpful to the community, parents, and schools

26
National Standards for Parent/FamilyInvolvement
Programs
  • Standard V School decision making and advocacy
  • Include parents on all decision-making and
    advisory committees areas such as policy,
    curriculum, budget, school reform initiatives,
    safety, and personnel.
  • Enable parents to participate as partners when
    setting school goals, developing or evaluating
    programs and policies, or responding to
    performance data
  • Treat parental concerns with respect and
    demonstrate genuine interest in developing
    solutions
  • Promote parent participation on school district,
    state and national committees and issues

27
Advocacy What does it mean?
  • An act or process of advocating or supporting a
    cause of proposal (Merriam-Websters New
    Collegiate Dictionary, 2003)
  • Advocacy in our discussion means organized
    efforts and initiatives whose goals or cause is
    to improve services and programs for young
    children in general or target groups of children
    with defined needs
  • It is the act of pleading a cause and defending,
    endorsing, or promoting particular ideas,
    principles, or individuals
  • The range of involvement in advocacy efforts
    varies greatly in most school settings

28
How do you prepare yourself to playthe advocacy
role for kids? (Whitebook Ginsburg, 1984)
  • Know about child abuse and the rights of children
  • Recognize the process of social change
  • Become aware of the effect of technology, power,
    class, and race have on families in a given
    society
  • View children as the future of society and as a
    protected class
  • View child care in a positive light, as a
    profession with ethical guidelines
  • Identify the use of resources in the community,
    state, and nation

29
How to Provide Governance and Advocacy Roles for
Parents?
  • Governance Roles
  • Involve parents in student goal setting at
    regular parent-teacher conferences
  • Involve parents and community members in
    developing the schools mission and goals
  • Keep parents informed of leadership
    opportunities on school committee and in the
    community
  • Form a parent council with advisory committees
    to support each academic area
  • Provide training for parent leaders in
    collaboration and problem-solving skills
  • Involve the parent council in planning ways to
    extend learning opportunities

30
  • Advocacy Roles
  • Parents provide input to policies that affect
    education
  • Parents feel in control of their childs
    learning environment
  • Parents and childrens rights are protected
  • Benefits for children and parents are linked to
    educational policies
  • Educators give equal status to interaction with
    parents to improve educational programs
  • Educators become aware of parent perspectives
    for school policy development

31
Rights, Responsibilities andAdvocacy
  • Rights to select their childs education
  • Student records
  • Rights and responsibilities of students and
    parents
  • Search and seizure, suspension and due process,
    racial discrimination, sex discrimination,
    children with disabilities, corporal punishment
  • Developing criteria together
  • Child advocacy
  • Child advocate

32
Parents Rights to Select Their Child Education
  • Use of school vouchers
  • The voucher system allows parents to choose the
    school in which they enroll their child
  • It could be a private school or a public school
    in or outside the familys attendance district
  • Charter school
  • Charter school may allow parents to help plan
    the school, determine the curriculum, and select
    teachers with expectation that the school will be
    more responsive to the parents and community
  • Homeschooling
  • Most states permit parents to teach their own
    children, but the states have varied requirements

33
Barriers to Advocacy Efforts
  • Feelings of powerlessness to change anything
  • Lack of knowledge regarding government
    regulations
  • Fear of the political process
  • Lack of confidence in their own expertise
  • Lack of time

34
Reform Program in Kentucky
  • School develop a school council, composed of the
    principal, three teachers (elected by the school
    staff), and two parents selected by the schools
    PTO
  • Among the councils authority and discretion
  • Set school policy, particularly to improve
    student achievement
  • Appoint both staff and principals when vacancies
    occur
  • Identify and purchase needed instructional
    materials
  • Identify and allocate district supply funding
    for student support services

35
  • Define and adopt policies governing curriculum,
    schedules, space usage, instructional planning,
    discipline, classroom management, extracurricular
    activities, technology usage, and
    responsibilities of all school constituents

36
Assessing and Evaluating Family-School
Involvement
  • Definitions of evaluation
  • Measuring the effectiveness, accuracy, success,
    or general positive gains of a process,
    educational program, or other initiative
  • To determine the worth of to appraise (Websters
    New World Dictionary)

37
Purposes of Program EvaluationImplications for
Administrators and Teachers
  • Provide the administrators and teachers with
    feed-back about the effectiveness of a program
  • Effective programs can be replicated by other
    teachers/schools
  • Funding agencies need to know the program
    outcomes for continuation purposes
    (accountability issue)
  • Parents and families can benefit from knowing the
    effectiveness of these programs

38
Evaluation Process(Payne, 1994)
  • Stating program goals and evaluation objectives
  • Determining specific objectives
  • Planning suitable evaluation design
  • Selecting data-gathering methods and techniques
  • Collecting data
  • Processing, summarizing, and analyzing data
  • Reporting results ti appropriate individuals
  • Determining program effectiveness and financial
    feasibility
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