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US DOE: Parents Need to Be Involved in Their Child's Education
Involving Parents in the Education of Their Children
By Patricia Clark Brown When parents are involved in their children's education, both children and parents are likely to benefit. Researchers report that parent participation in their children's schooling frequently: 1.enhances children's self-esteem 2.improves children's academic achievement 3.improves parent-child relationships 4.helps parents develop positive attitudes towards school 5.and a better understanding of the schooling process. Despite these advantages, it is not always easy for parents to find time and energy to become involved or to coordinate with schedules for school events. For some parents, a visit to school is perceived as an uncomfortable experience, perhaps a holdover from their own school days. Others may have their hands full with a job and other children. The availability and cost of babysitters are other factors. Recently, teachers and other school staff have made special efforts to increase communication with parents and encourage involvement in children's learning experiences. Ways To Involve Parents One kind of parental involvement is school-based and includes participating in parent-teacher conferences and functions, and receiving and responding to written communications from the teacher. Parents can also serve as school volunteers for the library or lunchroom, or as classroom aides. In one survey, almost all teachers reported talking with children's parents-- either in person, by phone, or on open school nights--and sending notices home (Becker & Epstein, 1982). These methods, along with requests for parents to review and sign homework, were most frequently used to involve parents. Parents can participate in their children's schools by joining Parent Teacher Associations (PTAs) or Parent Teacher Organizations (PTOs) and getting involved in decision-making about the educational services their children receive. Almost all schools have a PTA or PTO, but often only a small number of parents are active in these groups. Another kind of involvement is home-based and focuses on activities that parents can do with their children at home or on the teacher's visits to the child's home. However, few teachers involve parents through home-based activities, partly because of the amount of time involved in developing activities or visiting and partly because of the difficulty of coordinating parents' and teachers' schedules. Ways To Reach Parents Some programs aim to reach parents who do not usually participate in their children's education. Such programs provide flexible scheduling for school events and parent-teacher conferences, inform parents about what their children are learning, and help parents create a supportive environment for children's learning at home. Many schools have responded to the needs of working parents by scheduling conferences in the evening as well as during the day, and by scheduling school events at different times of the day throughout the year. It is important for teachers to keep the lines of communication open. This involves not only sending regular newsletters and notes, but also obtaining information from parents. Phone calls are a greatly under-used technique for keeping in touch. A teacher usually calls a parent to report a child's inappropriate behavior or academic failure. But teachers can use phone calls to let parents know about positive behavior and to get input. Parents justifiably become defensive if they think that every phone call will bring a bad report. If teachers accustom parents to receiving regular calls just for keeping in touch, it is easier to discuss problems when they occur. Teachers need to consider families' lifestyles and cultural backgrounds when planning home activities. However, some activities can be adapted to almost any home situation. These are activities that parents or children engage in on a day-to-day basis. Teachers can encourage parents and children to do these activities together, and can focus on the opportunities that the activities provide for learning. For example, although television viewing is a pastime for most children and adults, they do not often watch shows together. Teachers can suggest appropriate programs and send home questions for families to discuss. This discussion can be carried over into class. Busy parents can include children in such everyday activities as preparing a meal or grocery shopping. Teachers can also suggest that parents set aside a time each day to talk with their children about school. Parents may find this difficult if they have little idea of what occurs in school. Notes on what the children have been working on are helpful. Parents and children can discuss current events using teacher-provided questions. Teachers often suggest the activity of reading aloud to children. Reading to children is an important factor in increasing their interest and ability in reading. Teachers can also encourage children to read to parents. In areas where children may not have many books, schools can lend books, and teachers can provide questions for parents and children to discuss. Home activities allow parents flexibility in scheduling, provide opportunities for parents and children to spend time together, and offer a relaxed setting. To be most beneficial, home activities should be interesting and meaningful--not trivial tasks that parents and children have to "get through." When teachers plan home activities, they often think in terms of worksheets or homework that will reinforce skills learned in school. But parents often grow tired of the endless stream of papers to be checked and the time spent on "busywork." Another danger of promoting home activities is the possibility that there may arise an unclear distinction of roles, with teachers expecting parents to "teach" at home. Teachers and parents need to understand that their roles are different, and that their activities with children should be different. Difficulties In Involving Parents All teachers experience the frustration of trying to involve parents and getting little response. Teachers complain that parents do not come to conferences or school open houses, check homework, or answer notes. This leads some teachers to conclude that parents do not care about their children's education. While it is true that the emotional problems of a few parents may be so great as to prevent them from becoming involved with their children's education, most parents do care a great deal. This caring is not, however, always evidenced by parent attendance at school events. There are a number of reasons why these parents may not become involved, and teachers need to consider these before dismissing parents as uninterested. For many parents, a major impediment to becoming involved is lack of time. Working parents are often unable to attend school events during the day. In addition, evenings are the only time these parents have to spend with their children, and they may choose to spend time with their family rather than attend meetings at school. For many apparently uninvolved parents school was not a positive experience and they feel inadequate in a school setting. Parents may also feel uneasy if their cultural style or socioeconomic level differ from those of teachers (Greenberg, 1989). Some parents who are uninvolved in school may not understand the importance of parent involvement or may think they do not have the skills to be able to help. Even parents who are confident and willing to help may hesitate to become involved for fear of overstepping their bounds. It is the responsibility of teachers and administrators to encourage such parents to become involved. Conclusion The suggestions offered in this digest can help teachers involve parents who might not otherwise be involved. While it is possible for a teacher to implement such a parent involvement program alone, it is much easier if the school as a whole is committed to the program. Administrative staff can relieve some of the burden of implementing a comprehensive parent involvement program, and can offer help and support to teachers. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- For More Information Becher, R. (1987). PARENT INVOLVEMENT: A REVIEW OF RESEARCH AND PRINCIPLES OF SUCCESSFUL PRACTICE. ED 247 032. Becker, H. J. & Epstein, J. L. (1982). "Parent Involvement: A Survey of Teacher Practices." ELEMENTARY SCHOOL JOURNAL, 83, 2, 85-102. DeKanter, A., Ginsburg, A., & Milne, A. (1986). PARENT INVOLVEMENT STRATEGIES: A NEW EMPHASIS ON TRADITIONAL PARENT ROLES. ED 293 919. Greenberg, P. (1989). "Parents As Partners in Young Children's Development and Education: A New American Fad? Why Does It Matter?" YOUNG CHILDREN, 44, 4, 61-75. McLaughlin, M. & Shields, P. (1986). INVOLVING PARENTS IN THE SCHOOLS: LESSONS FOR POLICY. ED 293 920. Stevenson, D. & Baker, D. (1987). "The Family-School Relation and the Child's School Performance." CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 58, 5, 1348-57. Credits ED308988 89 Involving Parents in the Education of Their Children. ERIC Digest. Author: Brown, Patricia Clark ERIC Clearinghouse on Elementary and Early Childhood Education, Urbana, Ill. THIS DIGEST WAS CREATED BY ERIC, THE EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES INFORMATION CENTER. FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT ERIC, CONTACT ACCESS ERIC 1-800-LET-ERIC This publication was prepared with funding from the Office of Educational Research and Improvement, U.S. Department of Education, under OERI contract. The opinions expressed in this report do not necessarily reflect the positions or policies of OERI or the Department of Education. Children's Understandings of Parental Involvement in Education Researchers: Ms Pam Alldred, Professor Miriam David, Dr Rosalind Edwards, Social Sciences Research Centre, South Bank University Contact: Dr Rosalind Edwards, Social Sciences Research Centre, South Bank University, 103 Borough Road, London SE1 0AA Tel: 0171 815 5795, Fax: 0171 815 5799, Email: edwardra@sbu.ac.uk Duration of Research: August 1997 - July 1999 Background Study Design Policy And Academic Implications Briefing Background Information There is a wide-ranging consensus that parents' involvement in their children's education is both necessary and beneficial. Education policy stresses parental choice and responsibilities, and strategies have been developed to encourage parental participation at home and at school and to link home and school more effectively. However, there is little knowledge about the part that children play in the process of parental involvement in education. We cannot answer key questions about whether: children like and facilitate, or dislike and limit, links between home and school; children prefer mothers' or fathers' involvement or see either as appropriate, in what ways and under what circumstances; and girls and boys, from different backgrounds, and at different ages, have different experiences and understandings. This in-depth study will foreground children's collective and individual experiences and perspectives on parents' involvement in their education both in the family and home setting, and in the formal educational environment of the school. It will take account of the broader meanings of 'family' and 'education', and how these interact, in children's lives. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Back To Top Of Page Study Design The research will use a mix of group and individual interviews with 70 primary and secondary school children in contrasting locations and from a diversity of backgrounds. The group interviews will give us insight into peer group norms around whether, and what ways, parents should be involved in children's education. The individual interviews will allow us to understand a particular child's experiences of involvement from their own mother and/or father. In both group and individual interviews, the topic of mothers' and fathers' participation in a wide range of daily and intermittent school curricula and other educational activities will be addressed, as will the settings (school and home) in which these take place. Examples of areas of parental involvement to be addressed include homework, computers and/or games, school outings, parental consultation evenings, and school governance, as well as children's role in communication between home and school through carrying letters and so on. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Back To Top Of Page Policy And Academic Implications The study will facilitate understanding of how children, collectively and individually, negotiate parental involvement in their education across the two important settings of home and school. In terms of policy implications, the findings will be useful to education policy-makers and practitioners. They will be of relevance to policy discussions of parental involvement in children's education, especially home-school contracts currently taking place, and also to more local developments in home-school relations within local education authorities (LEAs) and in individual schools. Representatives of organisations with an interest in children's issues generally and/or education will be involved throughout the research. Academically, the research will make a contribution to theoretical developments within the sociologies of childhood, including the relationship between agency and structure in children's lives. It will also broaden the focus of research into parental involvement through applying perspectives and concerns from the sociologies of childhood to an area of education research that has largely ignored children's understandings and role. More generally, the research will contribute towards recognition of children's activity within society, and can help inform children themselves, as well as their parents, about aspects of their lives. |