WHAT WORKS IN EDUCATION The George Lucas Educational Foundation

New Teacher Academy: How to Work with Parents

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I've always heard good things

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I've always heard good things about starting the year off right with a positive note to parents. I really like the suggestion of making it more personalized. That way you are developing a positive relationship with the student and also showing the parents that you have genuine interest in their child.

K-5 Visual Art Teacher

I think that is very

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I think that is very important to always keep communication open between parent. There has been several times where I have talked to parents and also invited them into my classroom to see there students interacting with the other students and their classwork. Thanks for the great tips about working with parents.

Professor Meharry Medical College & K-16 STEM Program Director

I wholeheartedly endorse the

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I wholeheartedly endorse the emphasis on communication and celebrating strengths. I would add the following, speaking from a parent's perspective, and to address some of the frustration I see in other comments. 1) Understand that parents acquire baggage as their children move through school so that the anger you see, may not really be directed at you. You may have to sort through some of that frustration before they are ready to hear what you are saying. 2) Give up on getting everything you want so that you can negotiate to get something that will help. A parent who is working second shift to keep a roof over the child's head may think that that is more important than monitoring homework every night, but they might be able to do something on the weekend, 3) Don't tell me the day before that the deadline is tomorrow, and don't tell me the deadline has passed. You are setting me up to fail as well as my child. Get me involved when I can have an impact so we can all feel successful. 4) Be specific. Don't just say my child is "failing Spanish" or is "disrupting the class". It is much more useful to say, "L. hasn't turned in assignment x, y and z", or "M. is having side conversations with so-and-so when I am giving directions at the start of class." This is also a good time to let me know some specific good things you notice, "L. is doing better with her vocabulary tests", "M is contributing more productively to class discussions". 5) When you present me with a problem, have some suggested solutions. These should include changes you are trying in the class as well as things you want me or my child to change. Remember that you are the professional educator. I know a lot about my child, so definitely ask me for ideas, but I may not know how to fix their problems and I don't have the educational toolkit to search for a solution. I might not know how to exploit their strengths, so you can help me with that as well. 6)Put on your culture-detective hat when you feel frustrated or communication breaks down. Language, how you interact with authority, gender roles, individualism vs communalism, how negatives are expressed,even differences in technological savvy trip up collaboration, even with shared goals. 7) Try to meet parents in their environment, not just yours. This might mean visiting homes or it could mean going to a basketball game where you both are sitting in the stands. 8) Celebrate and remember your successes. Keep the thank you notes and cheezy presents we give to show our appreciation.

Working with parent

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I think technology is an excellent way to communicate with parents and I plan to one day use it in my classroom. Thanks for all the great tips.

Parent of 1 High School Student in VA

Thank you Lisa for this Blog.

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I currently a grad student working on my master's to teach. Your blog provides a lot of helpful tips and information. Thank you. Looking forward to the last lesson. : )

Consultant, Blogger, Faculty at Center for Learning, Group Moderator

Hi Leticia, As a former

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Hi Leticia,
As a former principal, I had this issue happen personally as well as with my teachers. My advice to you is that if the conversation gets volatile, you need to gently, but firmly and respectfully end it. Use those good reflective words. Share how you can see that they are upset, and you will need to stop the conference and continue at another time. Maybe have a teacher colleague with you when you resume the conference with this parent next time. I've seen these kinds of conferences turned around to positive, by just taking a break.

Business and Computer Science Teacher, Georgia

Helpful Tips

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I enjoyed reading the tips that will help me when dealing with problems. I just find it hard always ccontacting parents with negative information. In the future, I will send out positive letters through e-mail with parents so that I will build some rapport with them. Through experience thought, I have learned that parents just want to be informed about what their child is doing in your classroom and how they are performing.

It is quite rewarding to see

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It is quite rewarding to see that there are other educators facing similar challenges. I was attracted to the post based on the great tips that were given. There are actually on my list to try to aid me with the lack of parental support being experienced by my students. The approach of using food to entice parents is a welcomed suggestion.

High school teacher - Australia

Thanks!

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A great post and some great tips.
Parents can be hard to deal with sometimes, but often it is the most rewarding part of my job as a teacher I find.
In fact, I've dedicated my blog to the role of parents in schools and why teachers are becoming pseudo parents.
www.notyourparent.com

What a great post you've written. I'll be sure to pass it on!

Mike - Not Your Parent.

student of masters in education, Texas

My question is, if you have

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My question is, if you have contacted a parent for the request of their help in their child's education and you start very positive and have the conversation going and it seems to be going well. When you ask for their help if the conversation goes bad and the parent becomes irate how do you turn it positive again. I have already explained that this is for their child's benefit and apparently they have by-passed this fact.