family and parental involvement lisa arneson, cesa 5 nancy forseth, cesa 10 yvonne harness, cesa 7

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FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

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Page 1: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

FAMILY AND PARENTAL

INVOLVEMENTLisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10

Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Page 2: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Statewide Title I Network

Provides base level services

to Title I districts and schools

for free or reduced cost in five

service areas:

1. Title I Implementation

2. Title I Coordinator Leadership

3. Title I Related Professional Development

4. Assistance to Districts and Schools Identified for Improvement

5. Resources and Collaboration

A collaboration between the Cooperative Educational Service Agencies (CESA) and the Department of Public Instruction (DPI)

Page 3: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

What you will need for this workshop:

Toolkit Handouts School/District Parent Involvement

Policies (if available) School-Parent Compacts (if available) Kit boxes – highlighters, post-it notes,

markers Chart paper

Page 4: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Objectives:

To present the foundational research that supports Parent/Family Involvement in schools

To provide the required components of Parent/Family/Community Involvement in Title I

To share ideas and resources to help increase Family Involvement opportunities that recognize parents and caretakers as equal partners

Page 5: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Whose Child is This?

"Whose child is this?" I asked one daySeeing a little one out at play."Mine", said the parent with a tender smile"Mine to keep a little while.To bathe his hands and comb his hair,To tell him what he is to wear,To prepare him that he may always be good,And each day do the things he should". "Whose child is this?" I asked once more,

Just as the little one entered the door "Whose child is this?" I asked again, "Ours", said the parent and the teacher as they

smiled As the door opened and someone came in. And each took the hand of the little child "Mine", said the teacher with the same tender smile. "Ours to love and train together. "Mine, to keep just for a little while. Ours this blessed task forever.“ To teach him how to be gentle and kind, ~Author UnknownTo train and direct his dear little mind,To help him live by every rule,And get the best he can from school".

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Page 6: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Workshop Warm-Up

Task:

Form small groups. Select a recorder and a reporter. Share and record the following information on chart paper: List successful family/parent/community involvement

activities that your school conducts to involve these stakeholders.

Identify one challenge your school faces in implementing effective activities.

In your small group, brainstorm possible solutions. Reporter shares one activity and one

challenge/solution with the whole group.

Page 7: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Workshop Warm-Up: Record Responses on Chart Paper

SUCCESSFUL FAMILY OR COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT ACTIVITIES:

CHALLENGES WE FACE IN IMPLEMENTING ACTIVITIES:

POSSIBLE SOLUTIONS TO OUR CHALLENGES:

Page 8: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Parent/Family Involvement is required because it has a positive impact on student

achievement.

Students with involved families, regardless of income or background, are more likely to:

Earn high grades and test scores Enroll in higher-level programs Improve their behavior and attitude Pass their classes, earn credits and be

promoted Attend school regularly Graduate and go on to post-secondary

education

Page 9: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Supporting Research: Regardless of family income or background, students whose parents are

involved in their schooling are more likely to have higher grades and test scores, attend school regularly, have better social skills, show improved behavior, and adapt well to school. (Henderson & Mapp, 2002)

The most accurate predictors of student achievement in school are not family income or social status, but the extent to which the family creates a home environment that encourages learning, communicates high yet reasonable expectations for the child’s achievement, and becomes involved in the child’s education at school. (National PTA, 2000)

When parents are involved at school, the performance of all the children at school, not just their own, tends to improve. (Henderson & Berla, 1993)

When they are comprehensive and well-planned, school/home partnerships result in higher levels of student achievement. (Henderson & Berla, 1995)

Page 10: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Joyce Epstein’s “Big Six”: Family-School-Community Partnerships

1. Parenting: Help families build on their strengths and parenting skills. Identify resources and support to help families nurture children.

2. Communicating: Plan and conduct workable methods of two-way communication focused on child’s learning.

3. Learning at Home: Provide ways for families and school staff to develop learning goals and continue children’s learning at home and in the community to meet the goals.

Page 11: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

4. Volunteering: Recruit and organize volunteer help from families and the community.

5. Decision making: Include parents in school decisions to develop leaders and represent all families in the school.

6. Collaborating with the Community: Identify and connect community resources to strengthen families, school programs, and student learning.

Joyce Epstein’s “Big Six”: Family-School-Community Partnerships

Page 12: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

ESEA Definition of Parent Involvement

Parent involvement means the participation of parents in regular, two-way, meaningful communication involving student academic learning and other school activities ensuring that--

parents play an integral role in assisting their child’s learning

parents are encouraged to be actively involved in their child’s education at school

parents are full partners in their child’s education and are included, as appropriate, in decision-making and on advisory committees to assist in the education of their child

(ESEA Section 1118 & Wisconsin Title I Guidelines)

Page 13: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Perform a needs assessment involving parents Prepare written parent involvement policies

District School

Create and sign School-Parent Compacts Follow public and parents’ “right to know”

reporting requirements Convene an annual Title I parent informational

meeting Build parent capacity through training, information

and coordination activities Perform annual assessment of the effectiveness of

parent involvement

Title IA Requirements:

Page 14: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Needs Assessment

The district engages in significant and meaningful involvement with public and private school parents and the community in:

the assessment of needs program & curricular planning program & curricular implementation evaluation of family/parental involvement programs evaluation of ESEA funded programs

(DPI Monitoring Guidance Document, 12/10/10)

Page 15: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Needs Assessment Requires Parent Participation &

Involvement Activities & Possible Documentation

Include: Surveys (survey copies, results) Planning meetings (agendas, sign-in sheets) Focus groups/school improvement

committees/strategic planning teams (agendas, sign-in sheets, minutes, outcomes)

* How does your district include parents in planning, implementing and evaluating Title I Programs?*** Think! Pair! Share!

Page 16: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

District and School Policies Require Parent Involvement

Parent involvement policies must include a board approved district policy and a school policy.

Policies should not be identical. District policies broadly address the needs of students and

families across the district. School policies should be fluid and responsive to the

current needs of children and families within the school. Parents must be involved in the creation and evaluation of

these policies. The law requires all Title I parents to have access to these

policies (website, newsletter, annual meeting, etc.).

Page 17: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Documentation of Parental Involvement

Copy of a district parental involvement policy Sample Title I school parental involvement policy Sample of a school/parent compact Evidence of parental involvement representing

both public and private school Title I students Description of the district’s annual assessment

process utilized to determine degree of effectiveness

Summary of the assessment results and how they were used in planning or modifying activities

Page 18: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

District and School Parental Involvement Policies

Group Activity Examine your district/school policy (or sample

Parental Involvement Policy templates) and compare it to the appropriate (district or school) checklist provided.

Question: What work needs to be done on these policies in your district?

Page 19: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Parental Involvement Policies

Quick Comprehension Check

Page 20: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Parental Involvement Policy fact?

A school hires a consulting firm to conduct a needs assessment on reaching out to parents for school improvement purposes.

The school uses the report to write a policy with strategies that the consulting firm recommended and sends the policy home to parents at the beginning of the year.

The school meets its parental involvement policy requirements.

True or false?

Page 21: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Parental Involvement Policy fact

The school cannot set a policy on its own. Parents have to be consulted in developing and reviewing the parent involvement policy and must agree on the strategies to be used even if a consulting firm is hired to conduct the needs assessment.

Page 22: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

School-Parent Compacts

Required by all Title I schools

Must be developed jointly with parents of all students served by Title I

All parents in Title I Schoolwide Programs must be invited to participate

All parents of Title I Targeted Assistance students must be invited to participate

Page 23: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

School-Parent Compacts

Compacts must address: How parents, staff and students share responsibility for

improved student achievement School’s responsibility to provide high quality instruction

to meet standards Ways in which parents will support their child’s learning

at home Importance of communication between teachers and

parents on an ongoing basis Importance of communication between school and home

Targeted Assistance vs. Schoolwide Elementary vs. Secondary

Page 24: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

School-Parent Compacts

At a minimum, communication between teacher and parent must occur: Annually at parent-teacher conferences to discuss the compact Through frequent reports on child’s progress Through reasonable accessibility to staff,

opportunities to volunteer and participate in their child’s class

(Wisconsin Title I Guidelines)

Page 25: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Evaluating School-Parent Compacts

Review your School-Parent Compact or sample compact included in resources

Use the Title I School-Parent Compact Checklist and evaluate your compact or sample

Discuss: How does your School-Parent Compact describe the respective responsibilities of the school staff, parents and students in striving to raise student achievement?

Page 26: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

School-Parent Compact

Quick Comprehension Check

Page 27: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

School-Parent Compact fact?

A school-parent compact must include concrete details about what parents should do to help their children succeed academically.

Page 28: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

School-Parent Compact fact

It will help make the compact understandable to parents and measurable to reviewers if you include specific actions.

Page 29: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

School-Parent Compact fact?

Once you create a school-parent compact, you just need to prove you kept it on file and available for parents to review.

Page 30: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

School-Parent Compact fact

Remember that the compact is meant to be used. It should be reviewed and discussed with parents as it relates to their child’s progress.

Page 31: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Required Parent Notification and “Right to Know”

Required notifications include: Annual report card on student achievement Qualifications of teachers (“highly qualified”) Paraprofessional support/qualifications; Identification for participation in Title I

(targeted assistance) Participation in an ELL program

Must include reasons child was placed in a language program

Level of English proficiency and how it was assessed Status of child’s academic achievement

Page 32: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Required Parent Notification and “Right to Know”

Schools are required to notify parents in a language parents understand Bilingual communication (newsletters,

websites, etc.) Parent friendly language (readability)

Activity: Review resources provided for Parent Notifications and Parents’ Right to Know.

How does your district fulfill the public reporting and parents’ “right to know” requirements? Turn and Talk. . .

Page 33: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Title I Annual Meeting

Schedule a meeting to explain Title I requirements and parent involvement rights Targeted Assistance—invite parents of identified children Schoolwide—invite all parents Be sure to include parents of all served

public, private, ELL and homeless students

“In order to keep parents informed, schools must invite to this meeting all parents of children participating in Title I and encourage them to attend. Schools must offer a flexible number of additional parental involvement meetings, such as in the morning or evening so that as many parents as possible are able to attend.”

(Wisconsin Title I Guidelines)

Page 34: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Annual Meeting Requirements

Parent information must include: A description and explanation of the school’s curriculum

A description of the academic assessments used to measure student progress

Information on the proficiency levels students are expected to meet

Keep Documentation: Invitations, agendas, sign-in sheets Curriculum guides, brochures, websites Assessment matrix for parents Classroom communications

Page 35: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Annual Meeting Reflection

Take a few moments to reflect on your annual meeting and think about the following: What topics have you covered? What topics have emerged from your needs

assessment? What activities have you used?

Page 36: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Annual Meeting Exchange of Ideas

Record ideas on an organizer and/or chart paper

Share with the whole group Optional: Draft an annual meeting agenda

Annual Meeting Topics and Activities

Topics Addressed

Activities

Page 37: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Building Parent Capacity for Involvement

Build parent capacity through training, information and coordination activities Conduct a survey to collect parent

perspectives/needs: Examples of topics for parents:

Their “right to know” Common Core State Standards State & local assessments How to monitor their child’s progress Literacy and math strategies Volunteer opportunities Coordination with other programs (Head Start,

afterschool, etc.) Homework

Page 38: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

“Twelve Promising Practices Schools CAN DO to Engage Parents”

Here are just a few… The formation of an Action Team for Parent-

Community Involvement Multiple opportunities to meet with parents

throughout the year at different times and locations Set up a “buddy” system for parents Teachers make positive phone calls home Create a service project that involves the whole

school

(From DPI Community Learning and Partnerships Team, 2001)

Page 39: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Appropriate Use of Title I Funds

Academic activities connected to goals/policies NOT purely social events

Communication Home visits Child Care Transportation Food

Light snacks—not full meals (“reasonable & necessary to advance goals”)

Page 40: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Appropriate Use of Title I Funds

Districts can reach out to preschool families (ages 0-5) living within the school boundaries of a schoolwide building Examples: “Book & Bib” to newborns Promote Wisconsin’s Model Early Learning

Standards (WMELS) Other outreach as needed

Page 41: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Appropriate Use of Title I of Funds

Conduct a Book Study: Professional book studies among staff to increase

knowledge and awareness of pertinent issues related to their students and families.

Non-professional book clubs in which parents could participate—just for fun.

Page 42: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Appropriate Use of Family/Parent Involvement Funds

Quick Comprehension Check

Page 43: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Appropriate Use of Family/Parent Involvement Funds fact?

The school principal has suggested using Title I parent involvement funds to provide sandwiches and soft drinks for parents as a way of encouraging more families to come.

Is this appropriate use of Title I funds?

Page 44: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Probably.

Remember, the ED has stated that “light refreshments are allowable if the cost can be justified as “reasonable and necessary” to advance the goals of the parent involvement program.

Page 46: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Evaluating the Effectiveness of Your Program

How does your school/district measure up?

Page 47: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Annual Assessment of Effectiveness of Family/Parent

Involvement

Spring meeting, survey data, feedback, other?

Sample: Parent Involvement Evaluation - Title I Program

Where do we go next?

Page 48: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

If You Are Just Getting Started…

Guiding Questions for Discussion: What are your areas of strength?

What are your limitations?

What goal(s) might you set to bring about the greatest improvement in parental involvement in your school?

(J.L. Epstein et al. (2002). School, Family, and Community Partnerships, Corwin Press, Inc.)

Page 49: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

If You Are Well On Your Way…

Review your current policies, programs, practices and other documents.

What other questions might you ask to evaluate the goals? Is there other information to gather?

Record any plan(s) for improvement.

Page 50: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

ABC’s of Parental Involvement

What have you learned about parental involvement in this workshop?

Record key ideas, words, phrases, tools, and resources on the ABC Chart.

How many items can you record on the chart in 10 minutes?

Highlight or mark any items you might want to focus on to improve your current parental involvement practices.

Page 51: FAMILY AND PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT Lisa Arneson, CESA 5 Nancy Forseth, CESA 10 Yvonne Harness, CESA 7

Let’s Play 12 Square!

What are some key ideas, phrases, tools, and resources you learned about in this workshop?

Record one in each of the 12 boxes on the group recording sheet.

Number importance of the items from 1-12.

Share ideas with the whole group.

Start making connections…