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Home-School Relations : Working Successfully with Parents and Families

ISBN: 9780205181261 | 0205181260
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Pearson College Div
Pub. Date: 11/1/1996

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SummaryTable of Contents
In order for educators to have positive working relationships with the students they teach, they must understand the families from which their students come. This edited volume examines the nature of the contemporary family and its relationship to the school. It provides practical advice for developing strong home-school relationships. Initially, this text paints the various pictures of the modern family. In addition to covering the traditional topics of ethnic families, change in families, and parent-teacher communication, Fuller and Olsen and their contributors delve further into the issues facing families today. Poverty, advocacy, fathering and domestic violence and their effect on families are discussed, opening new paths of understanding for educators. Diversity (cultural, racial, religious, and sexual orientation) is discussed, not only in a separate chapter, but throughout the text, to promote understanding of all students and their families. Unlike other texts in this field, Home-School Relations confronts the alarming statistics on poverty and how it affects children, and ultimately, their performance in schools. Home-School Relations is the best text available to prepare educators for all the forms of diversity they will encounter in the field. Beyond its in-depth look at ever-evolving families, this text provides solid, practical examples of building good home-school partnerships and fostering familial involvement in schools. Specific examples of activities and strategies are presented, offering the educator and pre-service student a valuable professional resource.
Forewordxi
Prefacexiii
An Introduction to Families
1(10)
Glenn Olsen
... MORE
Mary Lou Fuller
Defining ``Family'' and Determining Family Responsibilities
2(1)
Families, Their Children, and Teachers
3(1)
Changing World--Changing Families
4(1)
Home-School Relations in the Past
5(1)
Looking at Families
6(3)
Parent Involvement
9(1)
References
10(1)
Families and Their Functions---Past and Present
11(29)
Mary Lou Fuller
Carol Marxen
The Evolution of the Family
12(8)
Contemporary U.S. Families
20(2)
Patterns of Marriage, Divorce, and Remarriage
22(7)
Functional and Dysfunctional Families
29(3)
Summary
32(1)
Recommended Activities
32(1)
Additional Resources
33(5)
References
38(2)
Diversity among Families
40(27)
Sandra Winn Tutwiler
The Changing Family
41(1)
Family Structure
42(1)
Alternative Family Structures
43(1)
Ethnic and Cultural Diversity
44(3)
African American Families
47(2)
Asian American Families
49(2)
Latino Families
51(1)
Native American Families
52(1)
Religious Diversity
53(2)
Summary
55(1)
Recommended Activities
55(1)
Additional Resources
56(8)
References
64(3)
Parents' Perspectives on Parenting
67(20)
Karen W. Zimmerman
Becoming a Parent
68(2)
Parenting Styles
70(2)
Parenting Behaviors in Diverse Family Structure
72(3)
Single-Parent Families
75(1)
Divorced Noncustodial Fathers
76(1)
Stepparent Families
77(2)
Adult Parenting
79(1)
Rewards and Satisfactions of Parenthood
80(1)
Summary
81(1)
Recommended Activities
82(1)
Additional Resources
82(3)
References
85(2)
Teachers and Parenting
87(19)
Judith B. MacDonald
Teaching and Parenting
89(2)
Teachers' Perspectives on Parents
91(5)
Parents' Perspectives on Teachers and Schools
96(6)
Summary
102(1)
Recommended Activities
102(1)
Additional Resources
103(2)
References
105(1)
Parent--Teacher Communication: Who's Talking?
106(21)
Sara Fritzell Hanhan
Building a Coequal Relationship
108(1)
Barriers to Two-Way Communication
108(3)
Aids to Two-Way Communication
111(1)
Initial Communication
112(1)
Regular Communication
113(1)
Written Communication
114(2)
Parent-Teacher Conferences
116(3)
Communication with Parents of Middle School Students
119(2)
Other Ways of Communicating on a Regular Basis
121(1)
Communication on Special Occasions
122(2)
Summary
124(1)
Recommended Activities
124(1)
Additional Resources
125(1)
References
126(1)
Parents in the Schools
127(24)
Elizabeth J. Sandell
Parent Involvement in the School
130(4)
Facilitating Parent Involvement in the Schools
134(2)
Parent Involvement in Governance and Advocacy
136(2)
Facilitating Parent Involvement in Decision Making
138(3)
Additional Considerations in Facilitating Parent Involvement
141(3)
Conclusions and Recommendations
144(1)
Recommended Activities
145(1)
Additional Resources
145(5)
References
150(1)
Families and Their Children with Disabilities
151(19)
AmySue Reilly
Historical Perspective
153(2)
Number of Children Receiving Special Educational Services
155(1)
Legislation
155(2)
Family Systems
157(6)
Summary
163(1)
Additional Resources
164(3)
References
167(3)
Family Involvement Models
170(1)
Family Involvement in Special Education171(6)
Mary McLean
A Family Systems Conceptual Framework
172(1)
Family-Centered Intervention
173(1)
Models of Family-Centered Intervention
174(3)
Summary
177(1)
Family Involvement Models in Early Childhood Education177(7)
Elizabeth J. Sandell
AVANCE
178(1)
MELD
178(1)
Early Childhood Family Education
179(2)
Parents as Teachers
181(1)
Parent and Child Education
182(1)
Summary
183(1)
Family Involvement Models in Elementary Education184(7)
Elizabeth J. Sandell
MegaSkills®
184(1)
The School Development Program
185(1)
Center for the Improvement of Child Caring (CICC)
186(1)
Families Together with Schools (FT)
186(2)
Teachers Involve Parents in Schoolwork (TIPS)
188(3)
Summary
191(1)
Family Involvement Models in Middle Schools191(165)
J. Howard Johnston
The Outcomes of Involvement
192(1)
Impediments to Family Involvement
193(3)
A Model for Family Involvement
196(3)
Contextual Considerations
199(1)
The Model in Operation
200(3)
Conclusion
203(1)
Recommended Activities
203(1)
Additional Resources
203(2)
References
205(3)
Education Law and Parental Rights
208(27)
Gloria Jean Thomas
History of the Legal Relationship between Parents and Schools
209(2)
State Constitutions and Education
211(1)
State Legislatures and Education
212(1)
State and Federal Courts and Education
213(19)
Conclusion
232(1)
Recommended Activities
233(1)
Additional Resources
233(1)
Case References
234(1)
Family Violence
235(22)
Douglas D. Knowlton
Tara Lea Muhlhauser
Child Abuse and Neglect
238(6)
Domestic Violence
244(4)
Recommendations for Action
248(3)
Recommended Activities
251(1)
Additional Resources
252(3)
References
255(2)
Poverty
257(16)
Mary Lou Fuller
Sandra Winn Tutweiler
What Is Poverty?
258(2)
Myths about Poverty
260(1)
The Effects of Poverty
261(2)
Schools and Families of Poverty
263(3)
Working with Low-Income Families
266(1)
Suggestions for Working with Low-Income Parents
266(2)
Conclusion
268(1)
Recommended Activities
269(1)
Additional Resources
269(2)
References
271(2)
Fatherhood, Society, and School
273(29)
Charles B. Hennon
Glenn Olsen
Glen Palm
Basic Premises
275(1)
Fatherhood in Context
276(3)
Conduct of Fathering
279(2)
Understanding Fathering
281(1)
Fathering and School Achievement
282(1)
Benefits of Involving Fathers in Schools
283(2)
Society-Level Interventions
285(1)
Community-Level Interventions
286(2)
Parent Education
288(1)
Father's Involvement with Schools
288(2)
Family-Level Interventions
290(2)
Summary
292(1)
Recommended Activities
293(1)
Notes
294(1)
Additional Resources
295(3)
References
298(4)
Home Education
302(30)
J. Gary Knowles
An Emerging Inquiry
304(1)
Historical Overview
305(3)
Exploring Families
308(1)
Some Terms
308(1)
Inquiring into Lives and Experiences
308(1)
The Families
309(2)
Parents' Perspectives
311(4)
Teacher Role Models
315(2)
Experiencing Schools as Adults
317(1)
Previous Teaching Experiences
318(1)
Learning to Teach
318(1)
Teaching Practices Observed
319(3)
Connecting Experience and Teaching Practices
322(2)
Isolation and Teaching Methods
324(1)
The Home Education Environment Reviewed
325(1)
Conclusion
326(1)
Recommended Activities
327(1)
Notes
327(2)
Additional Resources
329(1)
References
330(2)
Educational Policy and the Role of Advocacy
332(24)
Shirley L. Zimmerman
What Is Educational Policy? What Is Advocacy?
334(1)
The Social Change Model: Its Component Parts
334(2)
Contradiction and Conflicts in Educational Policy
336(1)
Different Values at Different Times
337(2)
Educational Policy Developments in the United States: Illustrating the Social Change Model
339(3)
Education of First through Twelfth Graders
342(3)
Different Perceptions / Definitions of the Situation in Education in the 1990s
345(2)
Goals 2000 and National Standards: The Social Action of 1994
347(3)
Conclusion
350(1)
Recommended Activities
351(1)
Additional Resources
351(3)
References
354(2)
About the Authors356(4)
Index360

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