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Teacher, Founder of Stepping Stones Together ,and Educational Entrepreneur

Hi PD!Parent involvement are

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Hi PD!
Parent involvement are a strong predictor of academic success. We need to hook them into the learning process and partnering with their child's school early in schools. There are many studies out there that share when parents are given skill based solutions to help their child with early literacy skills the results are successful.
Saracho, O. (2002). Family literacy: Exploring family practices. Early Child Development and Care, 172(2), 113-122.
Literacy development is dependent on specific family interactions. When parents and child interact with literacy the experience is enriched and meaningful using a variety of interactions and contexts. This happens inside and outside the home. Studies on family involvement in early literacy focus on positive family involvement with both books in the home and knowledge of literacy.
I'd love to help you with your program. Please feel free to email me at eburton@steppingstonestogether.com

Teacher, Founder of Stepping Stones Together ,and Educational Entrepreneur

Hi Nikkie! My program,

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Hi Nikkie!
My program, Stepping Stones Together, would be effective for parents to learn beginning English skills along with their child learning pre-emergent literacy skills. Grandparents, caregivers, and loved ones are all amazing loving substitutes for helping a child learn to read. When a family (extended too) puts an emphasis on taking ownership for beginning learning the whole family dedicates themselves to academic achievement and goal setting for the future.
Erika

Teacher, Founder of Stepping Stones Together ,and Educational Entrepreneur

Sara, Your school seems very

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Sara,
Your school seems very prepared and proactive to assist children/parent teams in academic success! You should feel proud :).
Parents need a bag of tricks to help their children. As every great educator knows, there is not a one program fits all solution but many will provide you with more opportunities to get your child the help they need.
Erika

Teacher, Founder of Stepping Stones Together ,and Educational Entrepreneur

Kindergarten teacher, Thanks

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Kindergarten teacher,
Thanks for your response! I'd love for you to share Stepping Stones Together with your parent community as we can only help parents with tactile resources they can immediately use and feel comfortable using with their children.
Erika

Kindergarten Teacher

I completely agree with

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I completely agree with parental involvement in early literacy. It is especially important for students to be "ready" with the necessary skills required for kindergarten. Most of our students have not been in preschool and are not yet equipped to tackle kindergarten. However, the students are registered and are attending kindergarten. In any case, it is vital to extend learning beyond school walls.

Great topic! Parent

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Great topic! Parent involvement is lacking at my Title I school. I really like the strategies you listed for early literacy. I also think reviewing parts of a book with the child (title, author, illustrator, contents, etc.) would be beneficial as well! There are many parents who do not feel confident in using various strategies to help their child academically. My school has a family reading and math night every month to model certain strategies for parents. I believe there needs to be more opportunities for parents to receive training on how to help their child academically at home.

Employee at NWEA

Response to PD Carson - 2 recommendations

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Hey PD Carson,

I was actually just speaking with a TX district leader about something similar last week. We discussed the fact that parents of ELL students often have busy schedules. They want to help their children succeed but 1) sometimes don't have much time to come to the school, 2) don't know exactly what their child needs help with and 3) don't have the English language skills to help their child with some subjects... 2 ideas/recommendations based on our discussion:

- INCORPORATE A GOAL SETTING PROJECT EARLY ON IN THE ELL PROGRAM
The district leader I spoke with had parents come up with a series of 12-15 goal statements for their child. All statement started with "My dream for you is...". Her plan was to use this to help parents consciously think of aspirational goals for their child and review them throughout the year to see whether they were helping their child get there. I think this can be a great exercise to do as part of the ELL tutoring program. You can teach language skills while having them answer this important question! Then you can have them reflect on it at the end of the program and work in groups/pairs to discuss ways to help their children move toward the goals they have set.

- EXPLICITLY INVITE OTHER CARE TAKERS AS WELL
Since the parents might be working/unavailable, consider making it a "family" tutoring program (the grandparents might often be more available and in some cases they are the ones watching the child most often).

Implementing a Parent Literacy Program for ELLs

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Hi!
I am going to be extending my ELL after-school tutoring program to include parents. I would like to know if anyone has any suggestions that will help make the program a success. I do believe that parents are a crucial element of success - whether or not any one study has listed parents in the first place position or in the last position.

I am interested in knowing

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I am interested in knowing your source for your opening statement, "Parent involvement is the number one predictor of early literacy success and future academic achievement." Earlier this year we were told at a meeting that parent involvement was 6th in a list of 6 predictors. As an early childhood teacher I was surprised by the comment. I would like to provide evidence that there is research that states that parent involvement is a key to a child's academic success.

Recent study

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Just read a recent study that analyzed how to make children smarter. Reading to young children, plus omega 3 supplements. Who knew?

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