html5-img
1 / 11

Kids Are Key

Kids Are Key. “The child pulls parents and teachers together, but without the help of one another, parents and teachers pull the child apart.” ~ Debora Tinnin

tyne
Download Presentation

Kids Are Key

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. Kids Are Key “The child pulls parents and teachers together, but without the help of one another, parentsand teachers pull the child apart.” ~ Debora Tinnin • Kids are the driving force behind parental engagement; theybring parents into the schools and transfer information

  2. Parent Voice • Value parent input and takethemseriously • Rememberthat parents are theirchild’s first teacher!

  3. School Council • AISI Coach fromeachschool attends parent council meetings • Shares AISI news and asks for ideas and input • Parents share information about the schoolwithother parents and the rest of the community • Coaches faciliate communication betweenschools and parents • Councils help plan and carry out school-wideevents

  4. Invitations • Parents are invited to PD Days, workshops, AISI Coach meetings, and conferences (AISI, AAC) • Invited to attend and participate in schoolactivites

  5. Learning Workshops • Teachers, AISI Coaches and Coordinatorsdeliverlearning workshops for parents on topicssuch as: • Assessment • Parental engagement • Feedback • Technology (SmartBoards) • Differentiated Instruction

  6. Communication • Aspen View AISI website • www.avaisi.ca • Aspen Viewwebsite • www.aspenview.org • AISI Brochure • Articles in local newspapers • Monthly newsletters • Student-LedConferences • AISI CelebrationCalendar

  7. CommunityPartnerships • Education is everyone’s concern • Utilize community centers, churches and libraries for school sponsored activities • Invite community members and businesses to School PD Days • Community volunteers to help with reading programs and mentoring • Engage local businesses • They see how supporting local schools is a win-win proposition

  8. TIP SHEETHow schoolscanimprove parental engagement 1. Know how you’re doing and take action • Assess current situation through surveys or parent comments, then make goals and create a plan 2. View parents as equal partners • Position parent knowledge and stories alongside teachers • Collaborate and problem solve together 3. Encourage parent voice • Ask for their input on decisions and share their expertise • Listen and act! 4. Invite, Invite, Invite! • Most effective when done personally and face-to-face • Invite parents to workshops, conferences and sharing sessions 5. Communicate • Frequent and two-way • Newsletters, phone calls, email, web pages and notes 6. Offer professional development workshops • Teach parents about new assessment practices and technology • May include parenting workshops

  9. Parental Engagement – How Important Is It?What the Research Shows • Parent involvement leads to improved educational performance (Epstein et al., 2002; Fan & Chen,2001; NMSA, 2003; Sheldon & Epstein, 2002; Van Voorhis, 2003). • Parent involvement fosters better student classroom behavior (Fan & Chen, 2001; NMSA, 2003). • Parents who participate in decision making experience greater feelings of ownership and are more committed to supporting the school’s mission (Jackson & Davis, 2000).

  10. Continued … • Parent involvement increases support of schools (NMSA, 2003). • Parent involvement improves school attendance (Epstein et al., 2002). • Parent involvement creates a better understanding of roles and relationships between and among the parent-student-school triad (Epstein et al., 2002). • Parent involvement improves student emotional well-being (Epstein, 2005). • Types of parent involvement and quality of parent involvement affect results for students, parents and teachers (Epstein, 1995).

  11. Involvement vs. Engagement Slide from Debbie Pushor

More Related