wideeyedone
Baby did a bad, bad thing
- Joined
- Jan 5, 2007
- Posts
- 7,070
I am doing the action research project for my master's on fostering parent involvement in public schools. I have just finished the literature review part of my project. This involves reading and summarizing the research that exists on the topic before we begin our own research.
It has been a very interesting reading experience. I am currently reading "Schools can't do it alone" by Jamie Vollmer. He was a business leader who felt that schools could be run on an incentive model-- until he dove into the issue and his ideas about reform changed. He goes back all the way to Jefferson to see the foundations on which public schools were built and how that system needs to change. He found allies in educators when he truly understood the jobs that they were doing.
I have been reading research as well as meta- research on the issue of parent involvement in schools and what the conclusions and the lack of research on some of the variables of parental involvement have been of real interest to me. I have only read about 15 studies and will continue to do research.
But the overall conclusion is that parents who read and converse daily with their kids make the most educational impact and that parents volunteering and attending parent events at school (the mark of what most schools consider involved) doesn't really impact students achievement-- while it may have other benefits.
As a teacher, I only hear about the achievement mandates of NCLB but there is an entire section of NCLB that is about inviting and including parents to be part of the decision making and instructional process of schools.
It has been a very interesting reading experience. I am currently reading "Schools can't do it alone" by Jamie Vollmer. He was a business leader who felt that schools could be run on an incentive model-- until he dove into the issue and his ideas about reform changed. He goes back all the way to Jefferson to see the foundations on which public schools were built and how that system needs to change. He found allies in educators when he truly understood the jobs that they were doing.
I have been reading research as well as meta- research on the issue of parent involvement in schools and what the conclusions and the lack of research on some of the variables of parental involvement have been of real interest to me. I have only read about 15 studies and will continue to do research.
But the overall conclusion is that parents who read and converse daily with their kids make the most educational impact and that parents volunteering and attending parent events at school (the mark of what most schools consider involved) doesn't really impact students achievement-- while it may have other benefits.
As a teacher, I only hear about the achievement mandates of NCLB but there is an entire section of NCLB that is about inviting and including parents to be part of the decision making and instructional process of schools.