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Family, School & Community Partnerships (FSCP) “…parents are a child’s first teachers…” Adams, et al (2003)

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Presentation on theme: "Family, School & Community Partnerships (FSCP) “…parents are a child’s first teachers…” Adams, et al (2003)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Family, School & Community Partnerships (FSCP) “…parents are a child’s first teachers…” Adams, et al (2003)

2 In the US, students spend _____% of their time from birth - 18 outside of school; Clarke, 1990 once in school, they spend _____% of their waking hours outside of school

3 Evidence-Based Partnering Definition and Principles Colorado RtI Family and Community Partnering Rubric Definition, 2010 Family and Community Partnering is the collaboration of families, schools, and communities as equal partners in improving learner, classroom, school, and district outcomes.

4 Evidence-Based Partnering Definition and Principles In effective partnering, each stakeholder shares responsibility for learners’ success by:  establishing and sustaining trusting relationships;  understanding and integrating family and school culture;  maintaining two-way communication;  engaging in collaborative problem-solving:  coordinating learning at home, school, and in the  community, using data;  acknowledging and celebrating progress. Colorado RtI Family and Community Partnering Rubric Definition, 2010

5 The Research: Summary of 40 Years For Students: Higher achievement, more homework completion, come to school more and stay in school longer, observing more similarities between home and school For Families: Becoming more supportive of child and teachers, becoming more confident in how to help child learn, learning more about education programs For Teachers and Schools: Improved teacher morale, higher ratings of teachers by parents, parents support schools and bond issues (Christenson & Sheridan, 2001; Epstein et al, 2002; Henderson & Mapp, 2002)

6 Academics Guaranteed and viable curriculum Challenging goals/effective feedback Instructional strategies Classroom curricula design Behavior Safe and orderly environment Collegiality and professionalism Classroom management Motivation Family, School, and Community Partnering Parent and community involvement Home environment Learned intelligence/backgroun d knowledge Factors Influencing Achievement Adapted from Marzano 2003

7 The Law: No Child Left Behind (First Statutory Definition in Elementary and Secondary Education Act ESEA) Defines parent involvement as:  Regular, two-way and meaningful communication  An integral role in assisting with their child’s learning  Full partners in their child’s education

8 What is the Shift? Traditional Parent Involvement  Parents  Schools are responsible  School initiated, set formal meetings  School to home, one- way communication Family Partnering  Family  Families and schools share responsibility  Flexible hours and meeting venues  Ongoing two-way communication

9 What is the Shift? Traditional Parent Involvement  Parents give consent to educational plans  Structured volunteering  Homework is often seen solely as the child’s responsibility, with consequences for lack of completion Family Partnering  Educational plans are jointly developed and delivered  Supporting learning at home and school  Homework is seen as an important home- school link and communication tool, with continuous successful completion integral to academic achievement and behavioral learning

10 How is the Shift Applied to Special Education? Traditional Parent Involvement  Often more of a compliance focus  Annual, triennial reviews tend to be primary touch points, with formal progress reports  Schools and home both working towards goals, but often separately Family Partnering  Compliance AND student outcome focus  Also, there is school and home progress monitoring, two-way communication  Coordinated learning between home and school, focused on goals and outcomes

11 Tiered Model for Families: To meaningfully partner with families across all Tiers Identify the needs of these families 11 To develop differentiated outreach Adapted from Breen, Childs, & Cavallo

12  Tier 1: Universal/Core = what we do to partner with all families  Tier 2: Supplemental/Targeted Group = what we do to partner with some families  Tier 3: Individual/Intensive Support = what we do to partner with those families with the most unique needs Adapted from Breen, Childs, & Cavallo

13 Targeted Tier - SOME (includes all Universal) Focused school/community outreach and problem- solving partnering for some families, students and school staff. Intensive Tier - FEW (includes all Universal, Targeted) Individualized school and community partnering for a few families, students and school staff. Universal Tier - ALL Positive school climate with school-wide efforts to welcome, include, and support every student and family; stated beliefs that: (1) education is a shared responsibility between families and schools; (2) families are equal partners; (3) student success is always the focus; each classroom provides coordinate learning opportunities for home and school. Multi-Tiered Family & Community Partnering Practices

14 The contents of this training were developed under a grant from the US Department of Education, #H323A090005. However, these contents do not necessarily represent the policy of the US Department of Education, and you should not assume endorsement by the Federal Government. Project Officer, Jennifer Coffey, PhD.


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