Families and Schools in a Pluralistic Society

Front Cover
Nancy Feyl Chavkin
SUNY Press, 1993 M01 1 - 268 pages
Recent research identifies increased parent involvement in education as a promising method to bolster student achievement. Statistics show that while many traditional white, middle class families have found ways to be involved with their children's schooling, our nation now needs to find ways to include more minority parents in their children's education. Most educators and parents would agree that minority parent involvement in education is essential; the mechanics of developing sensitive, realistic, and workable home-school relationships are more elusive. It requires a concerted effort by all involved to understand more about the complex parent-school relationship and to develop specific plans to help families.

This comprehensive volume features substantial material from the nation's most renowned research projects on parent involvement--Stanford University's Center for the Study of Families, Children and Youth, the Johns Hopkins University's Center for Research on Elementary and Middle Schools, the Southwest Educational Development Laboratory, and the National Catholic Education Association. In addition to a section on research, the book includes a section on practice that presents research-tested strategies on working with minority parents (Asian, American Indian, Hispanic, African American, and other minority groups). The book concludes with a section on future challenges that educators must confront and appendices on promising national programs and helpful resource materials.
 

Contents

VI
21
VIII
51
IX
53
X
73
XIII
85
XV
107
XVII
121
XVIII
147
XXII
189
XXIII
205
XXIV
217
XXV
227
XXVI
229
XXVII
235
XXVIII
245
XXIX
255

XIX
149
XX
157
XXI
175
XXX
261
XXXI
263
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Page 7 - Parents are their children's first and most influential teachers. What parents do to help their children learn is more important to academic success than how well-off the family is.
Page 1 - The American Council on Education and the Education Commission of the States (1988)

About the author (1993)

Nancy Feyl Chavkin is Co-Director, Coalition for PRIDE, a multi-ethnic family-school-community partnership program funded by a Fund for the Improvement of Schools and Teaching (FIRST) Grant from the U.S. Department of Education, and Assistant Professor, Walter H. Richter Institute of Social Work, Southwest Texas State University, San Marcos.

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