Ideas for Working Together with Parents
Every study of the impact of parent involvement on student achievement tells us that parents are vital to student success. TeachersFirst has collected these resources to help build mutual understanding and cooperation with parents.
Remember that parents are rarely familiar with the vocabulary we routinely use in schools (“Edu-ese”). A “content area” to them could be a place where people are happy! You, as the teacher, must be “bilingual” even in English. If the parents are non-English speakers, the challenges are even greater. Here are some resources to help you work together and share ideas, no matter what the situation.
Study Skills Resources: Help parents to support their students as they do homework, study for tests, and more. This list of reviewed resources provides many ideas for students to learn how to learn. Included are web-based tools that students (and parents) can use at home to review and reinforce new concepts and terms. The tools make the study process engaging and personalized. Students rarely even realize they are “studying” simply through the process of creating their own study aids such as graphic organizers, online flashcards, etc. Share this collection on your class web page and be sure to tell parents about it at Back to School night. Maybe even offer special credit for students who make study helpers they are willing to share with classmates.
TogetheREAD: Share family reading and activities around a monthly theme for ALL ages using this outstanding series. Interwoven into each TogetheRead theme are questions and activities to prompt effective reading strategies of good readers. Parents and children of all ages can select books from the annotated lists, read together, and join in related free or low-cost activities. Written in language understandable to parents and without education "jargon" so familiar to teachers, these themes will help any child become a better reader and enjoy sharing family time.
Parent Handouts and Resources
Share these web resources on your class web page (or run off the printables to hand out), encouraging parent involvement and helping support their students.
For Parents of ESL/ELL students
On college planning
and career planning
On homework and studying
Supporting reading at home
To share at conference time