1 / 31

Beyond the School-Business Partnership

This project aims to assess and improve parental involvement in public schools, focusing on six states and 18 school districts. It seeks to turn parents into active advocates and create a collaborative educational approach. Research shows that increased parent involvement leads to higher academic performance.

dwebre
Download Presentation

Beyond the School-Business Partnership

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Beyond the School-Business Partnership An Appleseed Perspective on Parent and Community Engagement

  2. Evidence-Based What is the State of Parent Involvement in Public Schools and What is Needed?

  3. It Takes a Parent: Transforming Education in the Wake of the No Child Left Behind Act

  4. Appleseed Local Direction, National Connections. We are a growing network of local organizations, rooted in and responsive to their own communities, backed with national expertise and resources.

  5. The Project • Assessment of Parental Involvement, particularly since the No Child Left Behind Act • Six states: Connecticut, Georgia, Illinois, New Mexico, Texas and Washington • 18 school districts – city, suburban and rural, including one that is predominantly Navajo

  6. The Project • Partners: Holland & Knight, DLA Piper, Columbia Teachers College, Pricewaterhouse Coopers • Interviews of federal and state officials • Interviews of community groups • Focus groups with parents • Review and inclusion of social science literature supporting effectiveness of parents in raising academic performance

  7. What Is This Animal?

  8. Why Is It Important? • Goes to the heart of NCLB • Parents are largely overlooked as a key strategy in school improvement • Parents can help to close the persistent achievement gaps • Fulfills the mission of public school as open to all (including low-income and second language)

  9. Why Is It Important? • Turns parents into active advocates rather than just passive recipients • Creates a more welcoming environment and thereby a more collaborative educational approach • Social science research supports the proposition that more parent involvement equals higher academic performance • Mandated by law

  10. What Does the Research Say? • A 2007 study found that for students between kindergarten and 5th grade: • Increases in family involvement in the school predict increases in literacy achievement. • Family involvement in school matters most for children at greatest risk.

  11. What Does the Research Say? Research studies consistently “showed a relationship between parent involvement…and improved student achievement. This relationship holds across families of all economic, racial/ethnic, and educational backgrounds and for students of all ages” – The National Center for Family and Community Connections with Schools

  12. Findings Finding 1: Too many parents fail to receive clear and timely information about their children and their schools. Finding 2:Poverty, limited English proficiency, and varying cultural expectations are among the biggest barriers to parental involvement.

  13. Findings Finding 3: Poor communication with parents hinders their ability to exercise NCLB’s choice and supplemental education services options. Finding 4: Creative, multi-faceted communication and engagement strategies can promote better parental involvement in schools.

  14. Findings Finding 5: Parental involvement is not uniformly valued by school leaders as a key accountability strategy.

  15. The Goal Mission: Advance academic outcomes for students most at-risk of academic failure by empowering parents and educators to become knowledgeable and powerful advocates for school improvement and school success.

  16. Assessment-Based How Can Appleseed Make a Difference with the Measuring Parent Involvement Effectiveness in Elementary Schools Tool?

  17. Action-Based Ideas to Consider and Discuss

  18. Parental Leave • Employers provide unpaid leave for primary care-givers to attend school activities for their child. • Several states have existing laws mandating time off.

  19. Parental Leave • Tax Incentives for Businesses Voluntarily Offering School-Related Parental Leave • Survey at National Summit on Family/School/Community Engagement: • 55% Yes • 22% No • 20% Don’t Know

  20. Use of Technology Example: • Business Videoconferencing Technology Used for Parent-Teacher Conferences with Members of the Military or Parents Away for Business Reasons.

  21. Alumni Recognition • Provide Employees as Role Models Who Can Provide Living Proof that Public School Graduates Can Achieve Success • Create a Speakers’ Bureau Where Employees Can Talk to Parents and Kids About Their Work or Their Outside Passion

  22. Investment in Innovation The Federal I-3 or Investment in Innovation Grant Program Requires a 20% private match to secure fundsfrom the U.S. Department of Education ($650M in Stimulus). Pending: $500M Request. • A Possible Condition of Giving: A Parental Engagement Component

  23. Cross-Border Work Businesses are located in one jurisdiction but have business and employee connections regionally. Idea: Sponsor a cross-border/multi-district/multi-business collaborative stressing parent involvement, information sharing and more.

  24. Workplace Flexibility • Permit Parent-Teacher Conferences to take place at the work site. • Host Career Days to give students and parents together a sense of how the workplace operates and the knowledge, skills and disposition needed to be successful.

  25. Public-Private Partnerships • Work with schools to make mixed-use school and housing parent friendly. One way: Sponsor a dedicated parent gathering room within the complex

  26. Do-It-Yourself • Start a Charter School in which parent involvement is a central component. • Place an employee on a Charter School Board of Directors • Support a Charter School Parent Involvement Initiative

  27. Citizen Schools Participate in an existing program, like Citizen Schools: • Goals: School success, oral communication, team-building, community explorations • Twice a week apprenticeships (hands-on projects with volunteers) • Serves 6th, 7th & 8th graders

  28. Citizen Schools • Statistics • 37 Program Sites • Serving 4,400 Students • 4,000 Volunteers • 7 states: California, Massachusetts New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina and Texas • After-school program • Educators supervise 60-90 minutes of homework or study time

  29. Parent University • Participate in programs that bring value to the community while showcasing business expertise: • Real Estate and Homeowner Information • Banking Services • Health and Nutrition • Advocacy • Prepare Parents and kids for special academic academies

  30. Legislative Action • Involvement in advocating for parent involvement in reauthorization of the Elementary/Secondary Education Act (NCLB) • Involvement in state legislation • Speak out with business bully pulpit about the positive values of public schools

  31. The Bottom Line “Schools should be places that honor and respect families, that meet parents on their own terms. . . that [kind of] mutual support and engagement is still missing from too many schools.” -- U.S. Department of Education Secretary Arne Duncan

More Related