1 / 16

Families as Partners in Learning

Families as Partners in Learning. What does this mean Why does it matter? Why should we care? How do we do it?. A few definitions before we start. Partnership Education / Learning Families. We need a change in focus: From. We need a change in focus: To. Social. Political. Resources.

chayton
Download Presentation

Families as Partners in Learning

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. Families as Partners in Learning What does this mean Why does it matter? Why should we care? How do we do it?

  2. A few definitions before we start • Partnership • Education / Learning • Families

  3. We need a change in focus: From

  4. We need a change in focus: To Social Political Resources Cultural Child Services Economy Labour Markets

  5. Where do we do most of our learning? Source: Banks, J et al, 2007, Learning in & out of school in diverse environments

  6. The research in unequivocal…Kids do better at school when parents are involved in their child’s schooling • High performing schools have high levels of family and community involvement • This holds equally true for ‘high poverty’ schools as it does for white, middle class schools • In fact, family participation in education has been found to be twice as predictive of students’ academic success as family socio-economic status • Greatest impact in areas of highest disadvantage • Holds true across ALL levels of education – all ages, all stages

  7. Benefits for children & young people • Higher grades and test scores • Higher self-esteem • Improved social competence • Concerns are sorted more quickly when parents have a positive relationship with staff • Improved school graduation rates • Increased enrolment in post secondary education

  8. Benefits for families • Their children do better at school and achieve more • Families show more sensitivity to their children’s social, emotional and intellectual developmental needs • Families are better able to help & encourage their children • Use more complex language with their children and encourage their children to verbalize more • Have more information about their children’s education • Build their own confidence & skills • Build trust in educational institutions

  9. Benefits for schools • Improved student achievement • Families bring skills which complement the teacher’s skills & expertise • Improved communication to and from families • Improved community support • Increased public support for schools • Families contribute their time which frees up teachers to do more with students • Improved student behaviour • Parents can give help & advice on how to reach other parents • Improved teacher morale

  10. Family-School Partnerships Framework : What does it look like? 7 key dimensions: • Communicating • Connecting learning at home and at school • Building community and identity • Recognising the role of the family • Consultative decision-making • Collaborating beyond the school • Participating Note: This framework builds on the work of Joyce Epstein and the National Network of Partnership Schools

  11. Impact on student learning • Connecting learning at home and at school has the greatest effect on student achievement • This is often one of the hardest things for schools to do as teachers need to explicitly connect with families around curriculum/programs • The challenge here is to broaden thinking beyond homework and families monitoring compliance with homework

  12. Barriers to the formation of Partnerships: School perspective • Belief systems • Perception that families don’t understand the school, the education system, its constraints etc • Perception that families don’t care about their children / don’t know how to parent and therefore are likely to add little (if any) value • Lack of knowledge of the positive research findings on the part of schools & parents • Little understanding of how to effectively engage with families and little preparation for this role • Structural constraints • Reporting and communication from a deficit model ie what’s not going well • Language & cultural differences are not understood by schools and no strategies to involve ‘hard to engage’ families

  13. What might get in the way of families partnering with schools? • Believe an authoritarian Principal / teacher is to be valued so leave them to get on with the job • Feel they have little to offer • Concerns about their ability to help (time commitment required etc) • Unsure of their role or what they have to offer • Embarrassed about own education level / language abilities • Feel unwelcome / intimidated / talked down to / not understood by the school or its parent organisations • Teacher's assumptions of parental disinterest or inability to help with children's schooling • Carry own baggage from their school years

  14. What can families do? • Use everyday opportunities to educate • It’s the little things we do everyday, not the occasional special, event, that are of most value • Take an active interest in what’s going on at school - ask your children what they are learning • Encourage your child to read – at all ages • Show how you use maths and science in everyday applications

  15. What else can families do? • Be aware of the possibilities offered by technology • Visit the school, classrooms, attend parent-teacher interviews, ask questions • Show interest in your child’s homework and assignments • Raise concerns early with the teacher • Show that you value education • Have high expectations of your child and your child’s school

  16. For further information • Education Partnerships Division, DEECD www.education.vic.gov.au/ or education.partnerships@edumail.vic.gov.au • Families as Partners in Learning www.education.vic.gov.au/about/directions/familiesaspartners/ • Family-School & Community Partnerships Bureau www. familyschool.org.au

More Related