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Multicultural Parents Supporting Education. By Angel Browne, Vanessa Garcia, Tara Hamner, and Cindy Richards. Parental Involvement Matters. The Facts. Our School has low performing students Families are not involved Families involved = increase in performance.
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Multicultural Parents Supporting Education By Angel Browne, Vanessa Garcia, Tara Hamner, and Cindy Richards
The Facts • Our School has low performing students • Families are not involved • Families involved = increase in performance
The Benefits of Parental Involvement • Better grades • Homework done on time • Positive attitude • Good behavior at school • Less likely to need remedial classes • Less likely to drop out of school
Why Parents Are Not Involved • Single Working Parent • Lack of English • Lack of Education • Different Culture • Uncomfortable at School • No Childcare
Vision • Provide a safe place for multicultural parents to learn strategies to help their children succeed.
Focus • Early literacy • Language • Community information • Information on the U.S. educational system
The Venue • Monthly meeting at our elementary school • Library = parent meeting • Gymnasium = free childcare
Those Involved • Teachers • Interpreter(s) • Counselor • Administrator • Community sponsors • Community educators • Trained childcare providers
Strategies for Involvement • Publicizing through invitations, posters, websites, e-mail, and school electronic board. • Providing fun, engaging, and meaningful education. • Listening to the needs of the parents and tailoring instruction to meet their needs. • Providing a multicultural education. • Providing free books and materials to take home.
Materials Needed • Books for children in both English and the parent’s language. • Scissors, glue, paper, markers, and other art supplies for making literacy materials for the parents to use at home and for students to use while in childcare.
Sample Take-Home Activity • Parents will create a Literacy Parking Lot • You will need a small toy car, such as a Matchbox car. On a blank piece of paper, draw a parking lot with 10 spaces (see attached sample). Ask your child to drive the car to certain letters, letter sounds, or words that you say.
Sample Parent/Student Team Activity (Guess How Many?) • Place cookies in a jar. • Parents guess how many cookies are in the jar, but only write down half of their guess. (If they believe there are 30, then they write 15). • The next day in class, the children guess and put only half of what they think. • The parent’s guess is added to their child’s guess and is submitted to see which parent/child team is closest. • The parent/student team who is closest wins the jar of cookies.
Culturally Responsive Teaching • Providing a safe, welcoming, and nurturing environment • Promoting equality • Addressing real-life issues • Team-learning
Increase in Global Perspective • Learn from each other • Experience things from a different perspective • Accept differences
Impact on the School • Increased academic performance • Positive attitude • Good behavior • Lower drop-out rate
Impact on the Community • Accomplished school system = skilled workers
References • India Parenting. (2014). Retrieved from http://www.indiaparenting.com. • Johnson, H. (2011, April). Immigrants and Education. Public Policy Institute of California. Retrieved from http://www.ppic.org. • Nye, C., Turner, H.M., & Schwartz, J.B. (2006). Approaches to Parental Involvement for Improving the Academic Performance of Elementary School Age Children. Campbell Collaboration Library, (68). • Proven Effects of Parental Involvement in Schools. (2012,Oct. 4). Retrieved from graphs.net. • PTOtoday.(2003, July 26). Parental Involvement Matters. Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com. • Sight Word Parking. (2011, Oct. 18). Juggling with Kids. Retrieved from http://www.jugglingwithkids.com. • Single Parents. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.about.com. • Top 5 Ideas Parents Night. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.scholastic.com/teachers/article/top-5-ideas-parents- night. • What Research Says about Parental Involvement in Childrens Education. (n2001). Retrieved from http:// www.michigan.gov.