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- 1. PARENT TRAINING
- 2. What is Parent Training?
Parent training is an effort made on the part of the school campus
to help parents in gaining knowledge and skills which will result
in the improvement of the childs learning conditions, and result in
effective learning.
- 3. Who delivers parent training?
Administrators
Teachers
Community members
- 4. Example of a Super Parent Website:
http://www.beaumont.k12.tx.us/title1/page7.html
- 5. School / Home/ Student Relationship
- 6. Model: Teachers / Parents/ Student
- 7. Conclusion
Evidence supports that parents play an important role in the
educational process of a child.
Therefore it is to our advantage to train parents so that the
influence that they have on children, is a positive influence, and
not a negative one.
- 8. SCHOLARY EVIDENCE
Taken from several Journals:
1. COPYRIGHT INFORMATION
TITLE: What Do School Principals Think About Current
School-Family Relationships?
SOURCE: NASSP Bull 92 no3 S 2008
Copyright NASSP. For information on NASSP services and/or
programs, please call (800) 253-7746. To contact the
publisher:
http://www.principals.org/
2. COPYRIGHT INFORMATION
TITLE: Fostering Parent-Teacher Collaboration in the
Classroom
SOURCE: Techniques (ACTE) 84 no5 My 2009
The magazine publisher is the copyright holder of this article and
it
is reproduced with permission. Further reproduction of this article
in
violation of the copyright is prohibited.
- 9. Susan Emeagwall in Techniques Magazine states,
A Successful partnership between teachers and parents is integral
to student achievement.
- 10. Susan Emeagwall in Techniques Magazine states,
A study last year in the Journal of Human Resources found out just
how much parental involvement correlates to student success. The
authors of Parental Effort, School Resources, and Student
Achievement were able to answer resoundingly.
- 11. Susan Emeagwall in Techniques Magazine states,
that parent involvement does positively impact student performance,
adding that schools would have to increase per pupil spending in
order to make up for lack of parental effort.
- 12. Susan Emeagwall in Techniques Magazine states,
In fact, a 2005 Harvard Graduate School of Education report found
that the stress of dealing with difficult parents is one of the top
reasons that teachers leave the profession. In addition,
2005