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Research Findings: Engaging Parents in Raising Achievement Do Parents Know They Matter? Janet Goodall, University of Warwick
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Exercise.... 1. Describe one useful activity to engage parents 2. Describe some of the barriers to parental engagement 3. Give one example of information you give to parents
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EPRA Project – Research
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Respondents 314 respondents overall 95 members of school staff 81 parents 124 students 14 others 79 hours of interviews
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Report http://www.schoolsnetwork.org.uk/uploads/ documents/DCFS%20research%20EPRA%2 0report_127139.pdf Can be accessed from the SSAT Parental Engagement site: http://www.schoolsnetwork.org.uk/raisinga chievement/engagingparents/default.aspa
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Research Findings…
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Parental engagement in ‘supporting learning in the home’ is the single most important factor in student achievement.
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Parents’ influence on student learning outcomes is greater than the school influence “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” Student
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Parental engagement positively affects student behaviour. “If your parents had nothing to do with school you could skip your lessons and nobody will be bothered…” Student
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Why is parental engagement important? “I don’t know – it just is! And I’m not going to give up!” Deputy Head
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What is Parental Engagement?
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Independence Theme for many older pupils Different “profiles” at home and at school But still insist that parental support is vital
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“You need your independence at this age but you also need your parents’ guidance.” Student
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Parental engagement means supporting students’ learning, in the home
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Points for schools, from the research
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1. Need for coherence Clear message for parents Unified policy on parental voice and engagement
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2. Parental presence ≠ Parental engagement What makes the difference is what happens in the home
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Activities What was your Parental Engagement Activity? How will that activity increase parental engagement in learning in the home?
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3. Parental information ≠ Parental Engagement Parents need information they can use and understand But information can be a one way street And may not lead to changes in the home
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“I’m not sure we engage parents when we send letters... If I give information – I may only know I engage you when I get something back” Deputy Head
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Information for parents What is it for? What do you want parents to do with the information?
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Types of interactions with parents Examples of each?
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Parental Involvement ≠ Parental Engagement To sum up:
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Activities What was your information for parents? Was it closed or open? What did you want it to change?
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Barriers to Parental Engagement 4. What prevents parents from engaging with the learning of their children?
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Overall Responses
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Activities What were the barriers your parents faced? Were they barriers to coming into school or to engaging in learning in the home?
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Exercise Need a multiple of three groups – each with separate task
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Groups at each table… Flip chart: what you want Parental Engagement to do Sticky notes, group one: Barriers to Parental Engagement Sticky notes, group two: Parental Engagement Activities
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“Only connect…” Connect the barriers with any changes that they impede Connect the activities with any changes they facilitate
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Gaps…? Are there changes that are not addressed on either side? Any side? Are there barriers that are not addressed? Are there activities that are not connected to changes?
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Future planning, one… How will you address changes without connections? Or without enough connections? How will you address barriers? What will you do about events that don’t connect to change?
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Future planning, two Make a list of all the information you give to parents Decide: – What do you want parents to do – Is the information effective for that – If not, what needs to change?
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Closing thoughts...
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Proportion of influence on achievement
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Holistic view of influence – joined up thinking Full possibilities for achievement.....
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Consequently, schools need to place parental engagement at the centre rather than the periphery of all that they do. Parental engagement in children’s learning makes a difference- it is the most powerful school improvement lever that we have. Do Parents Know They Matter? p. 70
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Engaging with.... The learning of the pupil Dr Janet Goodall janet.goodall@warwick.ac.uk
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