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Who Am I? (Part 1 of 2). Teacher of high school students at AASDSpecial needsLanguage delayedFunctional curriculumVocational objectivesDoctoral student at Georgia State University in Special EducationConcentration in language development of students who are deaf/hard of hearingFormer secondar
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1. Including Parents in Your Classroom GDEAF 2004
Wednesday, July 21, 2004
Melody Stoner, PhD Student
Georgia State University
2. Who Am I? (Part 1 of 2) Teacher of high school students at AASD
Special needs
Language delayed
Functional curriculum
Vocational objectives
Doctoral student at Georgia State University in Special Education
Concentration in language development of students who are deaf/hard of hearing
Former secondary English teacher in general education setting
3. Who Am I? (Part 2 of 2) Mother of a beautiful two year old daughter
4. Who Are You?
5. Why is this information important to you? (Part 1 of 4) As a teacher of the deaf, it is critical that you communicate WITH (not AT) your parents…
How???
6. Why is this information important to you? (Part 2 of 4) Efficiently
Effectively
Frequently
Personally
Positively
Expecting a response
7. Why is this information important to you? (Part 3 of 4) You may be the first teacher to do this, providing…
Hope in the educational system that has perhaps failed them thus far
Care for their child by someone outside of the family
A positive outlook on their child’s personality and unique qualities and strengths
Information in response to the simple questions of:
What did you do today?
What did you learn today?
How are you feeling today?
A personal relationship with a teacher
A connection to a child they may not be able to communicate with
8. Why is this information important to you? (Part 4 of 4) With parents on your team, you will accomplish more with your students
Students will recognize and care that you care
Students will see a carry-over from school to home and from home to school
Parents will recognize and care that you care
Parents will help you support learning in the classroom and in the home
9. That’s a tall order! How can I do ALL that?(Part 1 of 6) Efficiently
With as little work as possible, stream-line it
Find the shortcuts you need
Providing the maximum benefit for you, the student, and the parent
View communication with parents as critical for more effectively impacting the students and the family
You need parents on your team
Parents need you on their team
Students need you and their parents on their team
10. That’s a tall order! How can I do ALL that?(Part 2 of 6) Effectively
Communicate clearly, concisely, and simply
Consider your parents your audience and modify your message and your language
Parents may have different cultural values
Parents may have different moral values
Parents may have different educational backgrounds
Parents may be struggling to put food on the table
Parents may be dealing with other children with a disability
Parents may be working more than one job
Parents may be stressed
What you have going on in the classroom may not be the most important thing in the world to them
11. That’s a tall order! How can I do ALL that?(Part 3 of 6) Frequently
More often than once in a six- or nine-week grading period
Depending on the number of students you have, you should be able to communicate with parents at least once a week
Make time for this in your daily/weekly schedule
Get students involved in helping you communicate with their parents
12. That’s a tall order! How can I do ALL that?(Part 4 of 6) Personally
Talk to the parents more often about their child’s learning, not always about the class’s activities
Provide multiple opportunities for the parents to share what is happening at home if they choose to do so
Listen to the parents’ voices
13. That’s a tall order! How can I do ALL that?(Part 5 of 6) Positively
Communicate about positive events, positive learning experiences, and student achievements
If you do need to communicate about something not so positive, you should already have the parent on your side if you have already communicated with them positively and frequently
14. That’s a tall order! How can I do ALL that?(Part 6 of 6) Expecting a response
Without the expectation of a response, your communicative efforts are one-sided and AT, rather than WITH
Provide opportunities for parents to respond to correspondence sent home
Multiple copies of paperwork; one for parent to keep, one for parent to return with comments
Provide space for specific comments or questions from parents
15. Reminders… You may find that one activity works well for one student’s parents while a different activity works equally as well for another set of parents
Take a survey at the beginning of the year to gauge level of interest in and teacher-parent communication options that parents are most interested in
Follow through on correspondence sent home if no reply/response
Follow through when you leave a message on an answering machine
16. How are you communicating with your parents now? Listen and learn from your colleagues…
Are you listening to and learning from your parents in the same manner?
Keep your ears open
Your parents have a lot to say and a lot of knowledge about your students
17. Here are a FEW other ideas for including parents in your classroom…(Part 1 of 4) Home visits
Videotapes of students sent home with a personal note and space to reply/respond
Provide activities at school for parents to participate in and personally invite them in
Call at least one parent a week with a positive report or simply to call; keep trying if you get the machine or no answer
18. Here are a FEW other ideas for including parents in your classroom…(Part 2 of 4) Write a personalized letter home to at least one parent a week with a positive report or simply to write and provide space to reply/respond
Include parents in a dialogue journal activity
Have parents send in pictures of family members or events with a short note of description
Send home a letter before school starts and shortly after school commences, as well as phone calls
19. Here are a FEW other ideas for including parents in your classroom…(Part 3 of 4) Personally invite a parent, sibling, or other family member to be a guest speaker
Provide parents personalized information on local deaf gatherings and attend yourself as well
Personally invite parents to presentations by students
20. Here are a FEW other ideas for including parents in your classroom…(Part 4 of 4)
Send home videos/DVDs/CD-ROMS of ASL for entire family to share and learn from
Make your own videos for parents to learn new sign language vocabulary from, while teaching students at the same time
Send home a weekly newsletter
21. Home Visits(Part 1 of 6) Go while the student is still at school, or shortly before he will arrive home, or while the student is already at home
Take along some support (or not…)
Audiologist
Social Worker
Transition Coordinator
Another teacher
22. Home Visits(Part 2 of 6) If the parent lives far away or does not want you to come to the house, what can you do?
Suggest a restaurant, a bookstore, a coffee shop…
What if they’re working?
How about a lunch date?
What if they’re only available on the weekends?
No one said teaching was finished at 3:00 on Friday…
Meet them on their ground, wherever they are comfortable and willing
Find a deaf social to attend and show them the ropes!
23. Home Visits(Part 3 of 6) What can you talk with the parents about during a “home” visit?
You don’t talk, you listen…
Just listen to the parents…
Take notes or tape-record or just remember it best as you can for later if the parent is uncomfortable with your taking notes or a recording
Remember that this is the parent’s opportunity to speak about themselves and their relationship with their child
Just listen and mull it all over, it is the parent’s turn to speak
It is NOT your turn now, your turn will come later
24. Home Visits(Part 4 of 6) Here are sample questions that you could use, but you can read the parent to determine what types of questions would be most effective
By all means, add to this list to personalize it for yourself
What are the parent’s dreams for the child?
What are the parent’s fears for the child?
What does the parent realistically expect for the child?
How does the parent view the child?
How does the parent communicate with the child?
Would the parent like some support in communicating more effectively with the child?
25. Home Visits(Part 5 of 6) When it IS your turn…
READ your parents for subtle communications about comfort and discomfort
Is it time to go, can you stay longer, or do you need another visit at a later date?
26. Home Visits(Part 6 of 6) Talk about yourself so that they may get to know you, if it feels appropriate
Ask if they have questions or concerns about current services or current options
You may get a different answer in the home, in their comfort zone, than in the school
27. Videotapes of students sent home with a personal note and space to reply/respond(Part 1 of 3) Did you take a CBI somewhere?
Are your students working with another class?
Are your students working off- or on-campus?
Are your students working on a special project?
Any of these ideas would work, as would almost any instructional activity
28. Videotapes of students sent home with a personal note and space to reply/respond(Part 2 of 3) Send home a note to provide background
Casual
Short
Simple
Ask parents to watch video, discuss with child, and return video/note by a specified date with a response of some sort
Follow-up if you do not receive a response
29. Videotapes of students sent home with a personal note and space to reply/respond(Part 3 of 3) Provide yes/no choices in print for parents to circle and some short blanks
Here are some ideas to get you started:
Did you enjoy this activity with your child?
Would you like to receive more videos like this?
Do you have any questions about this video?
Do you have any suggestions to improve this activity? If so, what?
Also provide several blank lines at the end for parents to provide input with an open-ended question, such as:
“Is there something in particular you would like to see on the next video sent home?”
30. Provide activities at school for parents to participate in and personally invite them in Communicate with your parents before you plan and find out if they’re available on such and such dates at such and such times and confirm, confirm, and confirm again…
Here are a few ideas to get your gears turning:
Throw an open-classroom party at the beginning of the school year
Invite parents in to see your students mentoring or reading to younger students
Consider putting on a production of something you are reading for the parents
Have a tea party to socialize with the local deaf community
You have ideas, too!
31. Call at least one parent a week with a positive report or simply to call; keep trying if you get the machine or no answer –Follow-up, follow-up, follow-up… You can call about something as simple as an “A” on a vocabulary test or a new friend
You can call to make sure that the parent has seen the latest journal entry or that the parent has the latest vocabulary word list
It’s more important that you have gone the extra mile to communicate with the parents than that the success may seem “small”
32. Write a personalized letter home to at least one parent a week with a positive report or simply to write and provide space to reply/respond(Part 1 of 2) Provide personalized information about the student for the parent
Casual
Short
Simple
Here are some ideas to get you started:
Explain what you taught this week
Provide information about how the student performed: strengths and weaknesses
What was successful in your teaching/reaching the student
Provide suggestions for reinforcement of instruction within the home
Does parent wish to continue receiving this sort of feedback
Does parent have any questions/suggestions
Would parent like to meet to discuss any concerns
33. Write a personalized letter home to at least one parent a week with a positive report or simply to write and provide space to reply/respond(Part 2 of 2)
Also provide several blank lines at the end for parents to provide input with open-ended questions, such as:
“Is there something in particular you would like to see on the next letter sent home?”
“Is there anything happening in the home now or soon that I should be aware of?”
“Is there any other information that you could share with me to provide conversational material for me with your child? (i.e., a sibling’s birthday, a new pet, an upcoming trip)”
34. Include parents in a dialogue journal activity This can be done in a variety of ways:
Student and parent
Student, parent, and teacher
Parent and teacher
Explain what the purpose is of the dialogue journal for the parent and just read and respond
Treat parent entries as you would a student’s
35. Have parents send in pictures of family members or events with a short note of description Have the student discuss these in class with previously prepared questions that were sent home to the parents to guide their note writing
Students LOVE pictures
Do a writing activity at the end of the picture discussion and send home a sample to the parents
Send home additional questions about pictures for parents
36. Send home a letter before school starts and shortly after school commences, as well as phone calls Provide some information for parents before the deluge of paperwork begins the first week of school
Tell them a little bit about yourself, how excited you are about the upcoming school year, what you plan to teach, and provide accessibility
Shortly after school starts, send home another letter or make a phone call to touch base and request parent wishes for the school year
Perhaps parent sees a need for instruction in an area that popped up over the summer that’s not addressed on the IEP
37. Personally invite a parent, sibling, or other family member to be a guest speaker Consider the units you are teaching for the year
How can you incorporate the expertise of the various families into your units
Perhaps you are working on categorizing department store items; perhaps a parent works at a department store
Perhaps you are working on community services; perhaps a parent works in the radiology lab at the hospital
Stretch your imagination
Find out what your parents do and work from that
38. Provide parents personalized information on local deaf gatherings, provide a personalized invitation, and attend yourself as well(Page 1 of 2) www.gachi.org
Scroll down to Silent Happenings in Georgia (SHIG) on your left and click
You will see several month’s worth of events
You can click on events for more information, directions, and phone number contacts
Last accessed on July 12, 2004
Information for three months available, June-August 2004
Future events
Church services
Movies
Entertainment
Sports
Social Dinners
Workshops
39. Provide parents personalized information on local deaf gatherings, provide a personalized invitation, and attend yourself as well(Page 2 of 2) www.whatsupga.org
Scroll down to Events Calendar on your left and click
You will see one month, you have to click on the next month to move forward through the months
You can click on events for more information, directions, and phone number contacts
Last accessed on July 12, 2004
Information for the remainder of 2004 available, and two events are already listed for next year as well
Interpreted plays
Captioned movies
Silent Dinners
Deaf gatherings
Golf
RVs
40. Personally invite parents to presentations by students What kind of presentation?
What are you working on?
What kind of project can you develop that will showcase student talent and engage parent interest?
Find out when parents are available to attend
Send home personalized invitations
Talk it up to the students to encourage parent attendance
Call parents to confirm attendance
41. Send home videos/DVDs/CD-ROMS of ASL for entire family to share and learn from Send home a personalized note to explain how the current material is incorporated into instruction/unit
Specify particular child’s weaknesses and strengths in ASL
Clarify and simplify how the parent can help child with ASL skills
Provide opportunity for parent feedback and questions
42. Make your own videos for parents to learn new sign language vocabulary from, while teaching students at the same time Send home a personalized note to explain how the current material is incorporated into instruction/unit
Specify particular child’s weaknesses and strengths in ASL
Clarify and simplify how the parent can help child with ASL skills
Provide opportunity for parent feedback and questions
43. And my personal favorite…Send home a weekly newsletter Request parent permission to take and use pictures of the students for all parents
Take pictures all week long of different activities
Spend some time reviewing each day with pictures and creating sentences to match
Select a series of pictures to send home on Fridays
Request parents to read, share, and discuss newsletter with children over the weekend
Provide opportunity for parents to respond, make comments, and provide suggestions
Students use newsletters for independent and shared reading the following week
They love to see themselves in pictures!
See my sample newsletters being passed around now…
My students looked forward to this, and so did my parents
44. What are your questions and comments?
45. Feel free to contact me at any time: melodystoner@hotmail.com
(home)
mstoner@doe.k12.ga.us
(work, August-May)
Please e-mail me with any questions, concerns, comments, suggestions, and successes!
46. Assignment? Yes, assignment. Make one goal for the 2004-2005 school year based upon this workshop and support each other in achieving this goal by contacting and replying to each other at least once a month via e-mail. Copy me to each of these e-mails.