Please Visit Our Sponsors & Help Support Our Community!
Save 20% on All Your Printing Needs Drive the World to Your Website! Storage Solutions
Text Sponsors: Baby Shower Party Favors | Professional Tutors: Trial Offer | Child Safety Book | Baby Toys | Palm Beach Jewelry | Search Predators | Protect Children | FREE Zoobooks Issue & Poster | Games: Free Trial!
JUPITER PARENTS Travelocity.com
Official Merchandise
Link to Us

ARTICLES
| Articles Main | Previous | Next |


 
How to Make a Difference at Your Child’s School

What’s the best way to help out at your child’s school? Check here to learn tips on making a contribution of time and effort that really makes a difference.

In today's world of higher expectations for school performance, achievement gaps and shrinking school budgets, parents may feel bewildered about how they can best help their school. Where do you start? What kind of contribution really matters? Read on to find answers to these questions and to learn tips on how to make a difference at your child's school.

Two Models of Parental Involvement

There are two models of parent involvement: the standard model and the new, according to The Case for Parent Leadership (published by KSA-Plus Communications and The Prichard Committee for Academic Excellence). The standard model includes such traditional activities as volunteering in the classroom or on the playground, helping with homework, coaching sports teams, fundraising and, of course, attending PTA meetings.

The standard model is no doubt laudable, but the new model of parental involvement brings something more to the equation: a partnership to improve schools. No longer should parents assume that school officials and teachers are the experts and parents have, at best, only a supportive role in the schools. Today's parents can play a significant role by holding schools accountable, setting high expectations for school facilities and school-level achievement, and helping to create programs that drive schools to improve.

Some Advice from Parent Leaders

The ways in which a parent can become involved are much more varied than they were in the past and many parents have demonstrated that their involvement does make a difference. Many parents have challenged school lunch programs to improve, banned soda and junk food from school vending machines and exposed fraud in the school district office. Others have formed groups of pre-school parents to support their neighborhood school. Still others have created tutoring programs to close an achievement gap within a school’s student population.

Crusade for Better School Nutrition

When San Francisco middle school parent Dana Woldow became aware that kids "were making a lunch out of a giant bottle of soda and a giant bag of chips," she decided something had to be done. Unfortunately, her initial efforts were met with resistance from an uncooperative district nutrition director. Her solution was to go directly to the superintendent to ask permission for a pilot program at her school banning junk food for half a year. Having secured this permission, she and some like-minded parents put together a committee of teachers, students and parents to move the project forward. Through their efforts they were able to prove that banning sodas and junk food from the vending machines and the à la carte food venue could be done, and that revenues from healthy food sales equal (and in this case were greater than) junk food sales.

Dana advises parent leaders to never give up. "You must be committed," she says. "Most of the obstacles that are put in your path are put there by bureaucrats. When they figure out it’s easier to give you what you want rather than continue to fight you, they will give you what you want."

Bridging the Achievement Gap

Edye Deloch-Hughes of Oak Park, Illinois, was aware of an achievement gap at her school. Edye says, "The reality is pervasive not only in inner-city communities, but affluent diverse communities like Oak Park." The questions that sparked her to take action were: "Why were our children scoring poorly on the Illinois Standards Achievement Test (ISAT) compared to their white counterparts? What could we do to help change it?"

Edye met with her principal, Flora Green, and a plan was hatched. They decided to "create a tutoring and mentoring program to address the academic and social challenges of our children, which would help supplement the programs already being executed in the school." Her plan evolved into a resurrected chapter of African American Parents for Purposeful Leadership in Education (A.P.P.L.E.), an organization that has existed since 1987 throughout the elementary and high schools in Oak Park, but had been dormant at her school for five years. Now, she says, "We’re proud to say we’ve tutored close to 60 children. Many have become honor students. Parent tutors now attend teacher workshops sponsored by District 97 to help strengthen their tutoring skills." Edye advises parent leaders to "talk to the principal and see what her needs are, then attract people with a strategy and a goal based on those needs."

The Benefits of Parental Involvement

Studies have connected parental involvement with improved school performance. Involved parents do many things to improve their schools from impacting student behavior through their presence to advocating for school improvement plans. In addition, parents who volunteer in their child’s school visibly demonstrate that they care, that they are taking ownership of their child’s education. This affects the child, the teachers and the administrators, who then feel both acknowledged and supported.

Research clearly supports the connection between a parent’s involvement and their own child’s achievement. A 2002 review of the research conducted on this subject (A New Wave of Evidence: The Impact of School, Family and Community Connections on Student Achievement), asserts that children with parents who are involved in their education maintain higher grades, attend school more regularly, continue in school and demonstrate better behavior. Children are more likely to enjoy school if their families show commitment towards their school and enthusiasm for the learning process.

Ten Tips on How to Make a Difference

No matter how you choose to get involved at your school, here are ten tips to guide you in becoming an effective parent leader striving to make a difference at your school:
  • Speak up if you are confused, need information, or see something that seems wrong to you.
  • Identify a specific need or issue that you can work on.
  • Build a relationship with the principal so that you can set goals and expectations with him or her.
  • Don’t go it alone. Build consensus. Talk to other parents. Reach out to those who usually don’t participate.
  • Learn how to run a meeting.
  • Build your case. Research the issue. This might mean learning the voting history of the school board members, finding out if other schools or districts have attempted something similar to your project, or gathering data from a scientific study.
  • Get to know your school's budget. Know what questions to ask of whom; know what documents you'll need.
  • Learn to use the media strategically to advance your cause.
  • To help prevent blaming and provide a common goal, emphasize that your efforts are focused on improving the school and raising student achievement.
  • Today's parent leader must think about the interests of all the children in their school, not just their own.


Copyright © Marian Wilde, GreatSchools.net Staff. Article courtesy of GreatSchools.net, an independent nonprofit organization that helps parents choose, support and improve schools. For more information, including detailed school profiles, visit GreatSchools.net. Reprinted with permission.


NATIONAL ALERT REGISTRY - RECEIVE RED ALERTS IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD

JUPITER PARENTS OFFICIAL MERCHANDISE

Get Any Game Free with GamePass


Contact Us

HELP KEEP THIS SITE ONLINE
If you have found our website helpful, please consider helping us keep our community online. We appreciate your help :)!



March of Dimes (ad donation)


Copyright © 2000-2008, Jupiter Parents
No reprints without written permission.

| Home | Community Guide | Jupiter/Tequesta Biz Directory | Florida Biz Directory | Pet Love |
| ChildCare Guide | Local Events | Children's Area | Copyright | Disclaimer | Privacy Notice |
| About Us | Link to Us | Forums | School Reunions | Home Business Area | Official Merchandise |
| Articles | Hurricane Safety | Movie Reviews | Fun, Family Friendly Places | Websites |
| Press Releases Received | Webrings | Healing Wishes & Loving Prayers |
| Chef Emeril Lagasse | Car, Hotel, Travel Reservations |
| Search our Site | Advertise on JupiterParents.com |
| Site Map | Contact Us |


Designed & Maintained by Blue Stream Designs
Our Website Community is Proudly hosted by FutureQuestClick Here To Get Your Site Hosted With FutureQuest


Other Websites in My ParenTime's Family Community:
| myparentime.com | stopsexoffenders.com |
| printablechecklists.com | funinternetgames.com |