130 likes | 214 Views
Parent involvement in a statewide preschool program for children at-risk for academic failure . Investigators Yash Bhagwanji, Ph.D. Maria Vasquez, Ph.D. Elena Webb, B.S. College of Education. Importance of topic Theoretical support Identified as best practice Endorsed through policy
E N D
Parent involvement in a statewide preschool program for children at-risk for academic failure Investigators Yash Bhagwanji, Ph.D. Maria Vasquez, Ph.D. Elena Webb, B.S. College of Education
Importance of topic • Theoretical support • Identified as best practice • Endorsed through policy • Statement of problem • Anecdotal reports • Challenges in research • Top-down decisions
Research Questions Family demographics Direct / indirect relationships Main & interaction effects Parent involvement Academic readiness
Method • Subjects – all preschool children enrolled at a state program – all deemed “at risk” for academic failure – from FY 2003/04 through FY 2005/06 • Settings – public schools across a Midwest state
Method, continued • Instrument – Teacher completed student records • Procedures – archival data obtained with permission from state officials • Analysis – SPSS; various statistical analysis
Independent and dependent variables Independent variables Family income Family structure Family ethnicity Primary language at home Health of child Age of child Gender of child Dependent variables P-T conferences Enrichment activities at home Classroom activities Field trips Parent education Other activities Kindergarten readiness
Some preliminary findings – Significant main effects • Consistent findings • The higher the family income the higher the involvement in parent-teacher conferences, classroom activities, and field trips • Compared to two-parent families, single-parent families were less involved in all opportunities
Significant main effects, continued • Families who primarily spoke a non-English language at home were less involved in field trips • Families who primarily spoke Spanish at home were more involved in parent education activities
Significant main effects, continued • All non-White families were less involved in parent-teacher conferences and field trips compared to White families • Compared to boys, families of girls were less involved in P-T conferences, at an odds ratio between .840 and .918
Next steps • Continue with main effects • Investigate interaction effects • Examine relationship among family demographics, parent involvement, and kindergarten readiness
Interpretation of data • Differences and arbitrariness of parent involvement opportunities provided by schools • Multicultural, cross-cultural communication, and other perspectives • “What does this mean for needed changes?”
Implications • Policy • Schools • Communities • Future research