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Super Saturday Baton Rouge March 12, 2011
Parent Engagement for Student Achievement
Super Saturday Organizers
• Louisiana Appleseed – Based in New Orleans
• National Appleseed – Based in Washington, D.C.
• National Education Association – Based in Washington, D.C.
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.
No Small Feat
• Defining Parent Engagement
• Is Parent the Right Word?
• Bigger Fish to Fry
• Conversation or Confrontation – HoverRound– Duck and Cover– Knock, Knock
It Takes a Parent:Transforming Education in the Wake of the No Child Left Behind Act
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
What Is This Animal?
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)
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
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.
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
What Does the Research Say?
Reduces drop-out rates and increases graduation rates–71% of diverse teenagers in high school said that more communication between parents and schools might have prevented them from dropping out.–Another study found that students were more likely to stay in school and go to college when families were engaged.
What Does the Research Say?
Family engagement leads to increased student achievement • Meta-analyses of more than 40 studies:
– Family engagement increases the academic achievement of urban elementary and middle school students.
• Title I Study: – Growth in reading test scores was 50% higher for
students whose teachers and schools reported high levels of parental outreach versus low levels.
What Does the Research Say?
• Other Proven Effects: – Reduces absenteeism– Encourages students to have better
attitudes toward learning– Leads to better social skills and fewer
behavior problems – Associated with higher expectations – Leads to better student-teacher
relationships
What Does the Research Say?
The most important benefit:
Helps improve trust in schools
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.
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.
Findings
Finding 5: Parental involvement is not uniformly valued by school leaders as a key accountability strategy.
Teacher/Principal Preparation• Half of respondents felt prepared to leverage
parental engagement by their pre-service training, while 40% did not.
“When I was in college they acted like our students didn't even have parents!”
“If I need a parent to bring a tray of cookies, then I can figure out a way to make that happen. If I want parents to value education outwardly, well that's a whole separate conversation.”
Limitations to Engaging Parents
• Less than half of respondents were able to name a teacher who was particularly effective at engaging parents.
• Most common limitations to engaging parents were lack of time, transportation difficulties and family issues.
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
Contact Information • Christy Kane, Executive Director
Louisiana Appleseed909 Poydras Street, Suite 1550
New Orleans, Louisiana 70112
504-561-7312
Edwin C. Darden, Director of Education Law and Policy
National Appleseed727 15th Street, NW, 11th Floor
Washington, D.C.
202-347-7960
Contact Information
• Janis Hagey, Senior Policy AnalystNational Education Association
Policy and Practice Department
1201 16th Street, NW
Washington, DC 20036
202-822-7586
Contact Information
Louisiana & National
Appleseed Web Site:
www.appleseednetwork.org
NEA Web Site:
www.NEA.org