These Are The Days Of Home-School Partnerships

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With the best of intentions, educators are recommending an infusion of energy directed at increasing parental participation in schools. The federal government has issued documents to help schools organize parent participation programs. Major educational interventions list parental involvement as an important ingredient. Scholarly writing on the topic abounds; new searches produce hundreds of references, many of them guides for schools to help increase parental participation or descriptions of programs implemented in one locality or another. The purpose of this report is to review scientific research on the role of parents’ involvement—at home and in school—in supporting children’s academic achievement. Unfortunately, the mountain of material about parent-school partnerships yields very little if any empirical data about the impact of parental involvement on students’ academic achievement. This review focuses on a different set of research studies: studies of specific parenting practices that empirical data have shown are related to students’ academic achievement. The factors considered here, unlike characteristics such as race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, or native language, are “manipulable;” that is, within the control of individual parents to increase or decrease. That parents play a critical role in their children’s learning is without question. In fact, extensive research


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These Are The Days Of Home-School Partnerships by Jeff Palmer - Issuu