birmingham schools tuesday 30 th september. raising achievement

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Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September

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Page 1: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Birmingham SchoolsTuesday 30th September

Page 2: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Raising achievement

Page 3: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Professor Charles Desforges

“In terms of attainment in school, if a child had a choice between moving from having a bottom quartile parent to having a top quartile parent or moving from a bottom quartile school to a top quartile school, the child should change the parent every time!”

(For the full report of the research, see www.dfes.gov.uk/research/data/uploadfiles/RR433.doc)

Page 4: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

A rationale for supporting parents in developing their parenting skills

Because every child matters

Core service for extended schools

Family learning

Home/school agreement

Better support when things go wrong

Raising achievement

Page 5: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Evidence base

2003 research by Charles Desforges (Professor of Education at Exeter):

Good parenting in the home can make more than a 10% difference in children’s academic achievement in school - even after all other factors (such as social class) have been taken out of the equation

Page 6: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

UK charity serving the statutory and voluntary sectors

Head office now in Birmingham

Over 30 years’ experience in the field

Have been running parenting workshops and courses in schools for 20 years

About Positive Parenting

Page 7: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Our distinctives

Accessible

Visual

Flexible

Realistic

Page 8: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Our values

Parent-to-parent

Preventative

Universal

Relationship-based Parent/child relationship is the

key to outcomes for children

Respect for each individual

One-size doesn’t fit all!

Page 9: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

What we offer schools

Parenting workshops

Longer parenting courses

Parents’ handbooks

Training for school staff

Page 10: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

PARENTING WORKSHOPS

Page 11: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Taster workshops

A single-session lasting 1½ - 2 hours, ideally run at times of transition.

Pre-school (18m – 3 yrs)

Infant KS1

Junior KS2

Pre-teen/teen KS3

Page 12: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Workshop content

Age-specific information (developmental stages)

Ways to boost the parent/child relationship

Strategies for behaviour management

Questions and other sources of help

Page 13: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Evaluation findings on workshops

98% parents found the session helpful

94% would recommend the session to a friend

62% of parents attending were interested in going on a longer course

Page 14: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Training to run workshops

Over 300 staff from

150+ schools were

trained to run a

parenting taster

workshop in their

schools in 2006

Bristol London Oxford Wolverhampton Coventry Nottingham Winchester Leeds Newcastle Peterborough Southampton

Page 15: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Feedback from school staff

“Thank you for creating this excellent resource and for introducing Positive Parenting into the school system.”

“I have been to quite a few courses, this has excelled all my expectations. Hopefully we can do the course justice and raise achievement.”

“I’ve been on many courses but they are usually very theoretical. This was full of practical tips and resources.”

“The best inset day I’ve ever attended!”

Page 16: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

PARENTING COURSES

Page 17: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Parenting Courses

Time Out for Parents For parents of children (aged 0-9) 5 sessions + 3 optional sessions

Time Out for Juniors For parents of juniors (aged 7-11) 8 sessions

Time Out for Teenagers For parents of teens/preteens (aged 9-16) 6 sessions + 2 optional sessions

Page 18: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Special Needs Courses

Time Out for Special Needs (7 sessions)

Time Out from Anger (4 sessions)

Time Out from ADHD (2 sessions)

Time Out from ASD (3 sessions)

Time Out for Dads (4 +1 sessions)

Page 19: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Training to run courses

4-day facilitator training in line with National Occupational Standards

NOS 319 Work with Groups of Parents

OCN accredited (6 credits at level 3)

In-house training

Key Stage transition workshops

Awareness days

Page 20: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

PARENTS’ HANDBOOKS

Page 21: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Parents’ Handbooks (£5.95)

Time Out for Parents (0-9)

Time Out for Juniors (7-11)

Time Out for Teenagers (9-16)

Time Out for Special Needs

Time Out from Anger

Time Out from ADHD

Time Out from ASD Time Out for Special Parents (Behaviour Management)

Page 22: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Parents’ Handbooks

Time Out for Parents (0-9)

Time Out for Juniors (7-11)

Time Out for Teenagers (9-16)

Keep them in the corner!

Page 23: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Environmental factors

Page 24: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Environmental factors

Page 25: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Parenting style

Parenting style is the way in which parents relate to their child

Parents’ behaviour affects children’s behaviour

Having an appropriate parenting style has been shown to be a key factor in outcomes for children and young people

Page 26: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Research

“Children tend to do better in families

where parents use an assertive

parenting style. This means both

warm and structured.”

Cowan & Cowan 1992; Marsiglio et al 2000

Page 27: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Aggressive/ Authoritarian parentingDo as you’re told and don’t argue!

Page 28: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Passive/ Permissive parentingDo what you want!

Page 29: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

If we don’t put in boundaries, someone else will…

Page 30: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Assertive parentingFreedom within limits

Page 31: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Assertive parentingFreedom within limits

Page 32: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Assertive parenting

Warm and affectionate Empathetic and respectful Recognises good behaviour and attitudes Clear expectations on behaviour Negotiates boundaries Models saying sorry Consistent Child can talk to you about anything

Page 33: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Key message

and

Page 34: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Questions?

How do you engage the hard-to-reach parents?

Find a member of staff who will build up a good working relationship

Be prepared to be flexible in your approach and what you can offer

Run your parenting course in partnership with your local community and agencies

Page 35: Birmingham Schools Tuesday 30 th September. Raising achievement

Positive Parenting

www.parenting.org.uk

109 Court Oak Rd, Birmingham, B17 9AA

0845 643 1939

[email protected]