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Pondiscio, Robert – Educational Leadership, 2022
Schools are facing a growing number of disaffected parents. To win them back, says one policy analyst, educators need to take their concerns to heart. After two-and-a-half pandemic years, writes policy analyst Robert Pondiscio, public schools are facing a growing number of disaffected parents--a trend reflected in declining enrollments. Pondiscio…
Descriptors: Parent School Relationship, Trust (Psychology), COVID-19, Pandemics
Adkins-Sharif, Jamel – Educational Leadership, 2019
As a new principal, Adkins-Sharif shares his lessons learned in the first year on the job. He hones in on classroom-focused learning to improve instructional leadership and create a thriving school culture. Adkins-Sharif suggests learning from other school leaders and peers, making time for classroom observations, and creating open dialogues with…
Descriptors: Principals, Leadership Responsibility, Instructional Leadership, School Culture
Kraft, Matthew A. – Educational Leadership, 2017
Matthew A. Kraft, an assistant professor of education and economics at Brown University, highlights new research showing that frequent, personalized outreach to parents can boost parent engagement and student achievement. He offers tips on how schools can create infrastructures, including digital technology tools, to better support such…
Descriptors: Parent Participation, Academic Achievement, Parent Student Relationship, Communications
Adkins-Sharif, Jamel – Educational Leadership, 2017
To improve outcomes for students in a high school alternative-education program, Jamel Adkins-Sharif knew he needed tap parents' knowledge and support. Doing this, he says, has required ramping up communication, repurposing parent-engagement events, and being honest about the fluid and often inconclusive nature of working with struggling learners.
Descriptors: Nontraditional Education, High Schools, Parent School Relationship, High School Students
Vollmer, Jamie – Educational Leadership, 2011
No matter how hard teachers and administrators work, they cannot fulfill society's enormous list of demands for schools without addressing the four basics of public sentiment: community understanding, trust, permission, and support. They can do this through the Great Conversation, a positive, ongoing discussion between educators and the public…
Descriptors: Parent School Relationship, Social Capital, Agenda Setting, Institutional Advancement
Fenlon, Amanda – Educational Leadership, 2011
The transition into kindergarten is a challenge for any student, but it can be especially difficult for students with disabilities and their families. In this article, Amanda Fenlon suggests that by planning ahead families and schools can smooth that transition and put students on the right road. She encourages families to work with their child's…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Kindergarten, Transitional Programs, Accessibility (for Disabled)
Kugler, Eileen Gale – Educational Leadership, 2011
The author describes her experiences leading a family engagement program in a South African elementary school and the parallels with her work with low-income immigrant families in U.S. schools. Schools often expect little from such parents, she writes, thus missing the opportunity to benefit from their strengths. When parents are welcomed and…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Parents, Foreign Countries, Elementary Schools
Henderson, Anne T.; Carson, Judy; Avallone, Patti; Whipple, Melissa – Educational Leadership, 2011
Wouldn't it be great if a school's administrators and teachers could sit down with parents and exchange ideas about what part each might play in supporting students' learning--especially in schools with at-risk students? Henderson, Carson, Avallone, and Whipple describe how they helped three elementary schools in Connecticut do just that, through…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Federal Legislation, Academic Achievement, At Risk Students
Auerbach, Susan – Educational Leadership, 2011
As a researcher in parent engagement in school and former parent activist, the author shares three lessons for sparking more authentic partnerships between schools and immigrant families. First, schools need to move away from deficit thinking and validate families' cultures. In the case of Latino immigrant families, this entails understanding…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Parents, Immigrants, Leadership Training
Weissbourd, Richard – Educational Leadership, 2011
When it comes to academic achievement, many parents in upper- and middle-class communities have gone overboard, hiring tutors for their preschool children and going to enormous lengths to secure a spot for their child in a prestigious college. Even though poor children face many hardships, teenagers in affluent families suffer emotional and moral…
Descriptors: High Achievement, Academic Achievement, Parent Influence, Parent Role
De Witt, Peter M.; Moccia, Josephine – Educational Leadership, 2011
When a beloved school closes, community emotions run high. De Witt and Moccia, administrators in the Averill Park School District in upstate New York, describe how their district navigated through parents' anger and practical matters in closing a small neighborhood elementary school and transferring all its students to another school. With a group…
Descriptors: School Closing, Web Sites, Electronic Publishing, School Community Relationship
Pushor, Debbie – Educational Leadership, 2011
When educators seek ways to connect with families and communities, they typically begin by looking outward. They attend to the barriers, challenges, and conditions that exist out there--families living in poverty, differing levels of parental education, and discrepant access to resources. Pushor proposes that educators begin instead by looking…
Descriptors: Parent Teacher Conferences, Family Involvement, Parent Participation, Parent School Relationship
Zimmerman-Orozco, Susan – Educational Leadership, 2011
Like many relatively affluent suburban schools, James E. Daly Elementary in Montgomery County, Maryland, has seen a rapid increase in its Hispanic and bilingual student populations. Many of the school's English language learners come from low-income, immigrant families. Zimmerman-Orozco, the school's assistant principal, describes the strategies…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Assistant Principals, Suburban Schools, Bilingual Students
DeGennaro, Donna – Educational Leadership, 2010
Lilla G. Frederick Middle School in the Dorchester area of Boston doesn't just train neighborhood parents how to use technology--it offers families who complete the training a new laptop practically free (for $50.00). What's more, students and parents participate in training sessions at the school together, with students often acting as teachers.…
Descriptors: Achievement Gap, Equal Education, Parent Participation, Academic Achievement
Payne, Ruby – Educational Leadership, 2008
Students from families with little formal education often learn rules about how to speak, behave, and acquire knowledge that conflict with how learning happens in school. They also often come to school with less background knowledge and fewer family supports. Formal schooling, therefore, may present challenges to students living in poverty.…
Descriptors: Poverty, Academic Achievement, Teaching Methods, Disadvantaged Youth