Schools and parents working together London Education Conference 8 February 2014.

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Schools and parents working together London Education Conference 8 February 2014

Transcript of Schools and parents working together London Education Conference 8 February 2014.

Page 1: Schools and parents working together London Education Conference 8 February 2014.

Schools and parents working togetherLondon Education Conference8 February 2014

Page 2: Schools and parents working together London Education Conference 8 February 2014.

“The school has highly successful strategies for engaging with parents to the benefit of pupils, including those who find working with the school difficult.”

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Giving you the tools you need• Research• Children’s views• Parents’ views• Barriers• Success factors• Process• Support

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Research• ‘… parental involvement in the form of ‘at home good parenting’ has a significant

positive effect on children’s attainment and adjustment even after all other factors shaping attainment have been taken out of the equation’

Desforges: The Impact of Parental Involvement, Parental Support and Family Education on Pupil Achievements and Adjustment

(2003)

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Research• ‘Parental engagement is a powerful lever for raising achievement in schools. When

parents and teachers work together to improve learning, the gains in achievement are significant.’

Engaging Parents in Raising Achievement - Do Parents Know They Matter (Harris & Goodall / University of Warwick / 2007)

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Research• ‘All the parents interviewed during the survey were very positive about how their

confidence, communication and interpersonal skills had improved considerably since attending family learning. Parenting skills improved along with wider learning. Parents commented on how they were better able to manage their children’s behaviour, communicate with them and support their learning at home effectively.’

Family learning: an evaluation of the benefits of family learning for participants, their families and the wider community

Ofsted, July 2009

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Research• Parental Involvement: The Missing Link in School Achievement (Larocque, Kleinman

and Darling, 2011)

• Supporting primary-secondary transfer through home-school knowledge exchange, (Teaching and Learning Research Briefing, 2008)

• Supporting Parents and Supporting Children, Dr Joyce Epstein, 2013 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8NjvqaUg7l4#t=14)

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What children say• Moral support: “If they weren’t interested, then you wouldn’t be”• Valuing education: “Your parents are your main influence, really – if they don’t care

about it, you don’t take as much of an interest in it”• Achievement and behaviour: “I try to be good for her (the student’s mother)”• Homework: “if parents know what it is they should be doing then they’re more

likely to do it”

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Do parents feel involved?• Around half (51%) of parents feel involved in their child’s school life (up from 29%

in 2001 and 38% in 2003)• The desire to increase involvement tends to be stronger amongst disadvantaged

groups• Parents of children who have been identified as having SEN but who had not been

statemented are the least positiveParental Involvement in Children’s Education 2007, BMRB Social Research, 2008

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Barriers to participation• Reasons why parents are not confident helping with homework

– Different teaching methods (39%)– Don’t understand children’s work (38%)– Not taught certain subjects at school (10%)– Difficulty with numeracy/number skills (6%)– Concern will confuse child/do it wrong (6%)

Parental Involvement in Children’s Education 2007, BMRB Social Research, 2008

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Success Factors• Senior management commitment• Whole school approach• Parental awareness• Gaining the views of parents • Quality of communications• Support all parents • Importance of targeting• Addressing other parental issues• Involvement to achieve engagement• Don’t give up

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Making it happen• Collaboration should be pro-active rather than reactive• The engagement of all parents should be worked for• Collaboration involves sensitivity to the wide ranging circumstances of all

families• Collaboration recognises and values the contributions parents have to make to

the educational process

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Getting started• A comprehensive needs analysis• The establishment of mutual priorities• Whole school evaluation of resources and necessary organisational adjustments• A public awareness process to help parents and teachers understand and commit

to the strategic plan

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External SupportFrameworks

•LPPA (Leading Parent Partnership Award): www.lppa.co.uk

•EPPa (Effective Partnerships with Parents): www.mosaic-ed.com

Events

•Parental Engagement Seminars: www.ssatuk.co.uk (support/achievement)

Other organisations

•Family Lives: www.familylives.org.uk

•Campaign for Learning (National Family Learning Network): www.campaign-for-learning.org.uk

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PTA-UK“A formal statutory relationship between schools and POs would facilitate a more educationally productive parent-teacher partnership”: What are Parent-School Organisations for? (Brook and Hancock, 2000)•Charity and membership organisation for all PTAs in England, Wales and Northern Ireland•13,600 PTA members and nearly 60 years of experience•Support for PTA start-up•Carlisle School Association (Middlesex): First International Party•St Saviour’s Friends Association (Ealing): Donut Mornings•Friends of Wykeham Primary School (Hornchurch): The Support Code

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