Transcript Slide 1

The Indiana Center for Family, School and
Community Partnerships
The Indiana Partnerships Center
931 E. 86th Street, Suite 205
Indianapolis, IN 46240
(317) 205-2595
www.fscp.org
Jackie Garvey, Executive Director
Jim Grim, Executive Board Member
Our Mission
The Indiana FSCP Center is committed to
partnering with schools and community to
engage, equip and empower all families to
be involved in their child’s education and
overall success.
Our Major Goals

Education and Outreach to provide timely and
relevant information to families, schools and
community partners regarding family
engagement

School and Community Capacity Building to
integrate systemic family engagement practices.

Public Policy and Advocacy that support best
practices for family, school & community
engagement.
New Definition
Research Informed Definition of Family, School and Community Engagement in
Support of Improved Family, School and Community Outcomes (National
Family and Community Engagement Working Group, 2009)
Family Engagement is:
 A Shared Responsibility:
- Schools and other community agencies and organizations are
committed to engaging families in meaningful and culturally respectful
ways, and families are committed to actively supporting their children’s
learning and development.
 Cradle to Career:
- Continuous across a child’s life, spanning from early head start
programs to college and career.
 Across Contexts:
- Carried out everywhere that children learn – at home, in pre-k
programs, in school, in after-school programs, in faith-based institutions,
and in community programs and activities.
Commonalities in National
Frameworks
National PTA Standards
Parent Engagement 2.0
National Family
Engagement Working
Group
1. Family Well-Being
1. Welcoming All Families into
the School Community
1. Home Visits
2. Positive Parent-Child
Relationships
2. Communicating Effectively
2. Community Walks
3. Families as Lifelong
Educators
3. Supporting Student Success
3. Parent University, Institutes
or Leadership Training
4. Families as Learners
4. Speaking Up for Every Child
5. Family Engagement in
Transitions
5. Sharing Power
5. Linkages to Outside
Partners
6. Family Connections to Peers
and Community
6. Collaborating with
Community
6. Systemic Professional
Development
Head Start PFCE
Framework
7. Families as Advocates and
Leaders
4.
Community Organizing
7. FCE Competencies as Part
of Evaluation, Certification or
Licensure
Share A Memory of How Your Family
Supported Your Learning as a Child?

What makes it MEMORABLE?

Why do you STILL REMEMBER
IT TODAY?
How Can We Effectively Partner
with Families?
Positive and Goal Oriented
Relationships
“Asking the Right Question
To Get the Best Education
For Your Child”
A workshop designed by Luz Santana
Facilitated by: The Indiana Partnerships Center
Voices in Action
Voces en Acción
A Latino Parent Leadership Project
Creating Parent Centers
Books on Board
•
Trainer of Trainers model
•
Interactive workshops in
English and Spanish
•
Uses the 5 components of
literacy
•
Activities for to develop skills
at home
Research
3.
Providing
Parents
with
Based
Knowledge
Parent
& Skills
Involvement
Communicating and Building Trust
Welcoming Environment
Are We Family Friendly?
Welcoming Walk Throughs
Effective Family Workshops
Diverse recruitment strategies
 Support on program designs linked to
learning
 Participatory
outcomes based

Power of Engaging Fathers
Professional Development of
Staff
Standards
Indiana has Out-of-School-Time
standards through the Indiana
Afterschool Network
 www.ian.org
 Standards 8 & 9

Parent Leadership
Research
2.
Linking
Based
Involvement
Parent
to
Learning
Involvement
•
Teams of diverse parents and educators
•
Goal: to link parent engagement to
•
Goal: to develop positive relationships
•
Goal: to build skills and knowledge to help
student learning and other program goals
between home and school
families take leadership roles
7 Big Stories from 30 years of
Research

When families are involved at home and
at school, children do better in school and
the school gets better.

The effects are greatest for low-income
students.
Students with involved parents, no matter
what their income or background, are more
likely to:
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Earn higher grades and test scores, and enroll in higherlevel programs

Be promoted, pass their classes, and earn credits

Attend school regularly
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Have better social skills, show improved behavior, and
adapt well to school
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Graduate and go on to postsecondary education
Families are doing more at home than we
realize or give them credit for.
For years, studies have found that families
of all education levels, and from all ethnic
and cultural groups, are talking to their
children about school, trying to keep them
focused on learning and homework,
encouraging them to work hard and get a
good education, and helping them plan for
higher education.
Supporting ALL families in their efforts to be
more involved and more knowledgeable
about what their children are learning is
an important strategy for addressing the
achievement gap.
We must build on their interest and effort,
instead of blaming families for not doing
more.
Parent advocacy and support has a
protective effect on children

The more families speak out for children
and support their progress, the better
their children do, and the longer they stay
in school. How is this similar for out of
school time programs?
The Indiana Partnerships Center
931 E. 86th Street, Suite 205
Indianapolis, IN 46240
Telephone (317) 205-2595
[email protected]
[email protected]
www.fscp.org
Serving Indiana Families for over 17years
“I know you believe you understand what
you think I said, but I’m not sure you
realize that what you heard is not what I
meant.”
- Alan Greenspan