Maxine Nguyen used to think getting her four children to school and making sure they finished their homework was enough.
鈥淔rom my culture, we usually leave it to the teachers to deal with education,鈥 said Nguyen, of Kent, Wash., who came from South Vietnam at age 4 as a refugee and had painful memories of being treated differently by teachers because of her ethnicity.
But her attitude changed once she got to know teachers, administrators, and other parents though a process in which her local school district was redesigning strategies to engage parents. Nguyen said she began to see teachers as fellow human beings who were approachable. The experience made her feel more confident asking questions, allowed her to better understand what was happening in her children鈥檚 classrooms, and prompted her to volunteer at the school.
Increasingly, schools are working to bridge the cultural differences to get families engaged more deeply in their children鈥檚 education. This means welcoming families, visiting their homes, listening to their experiences, and explaining the educational system so that families can recognize when biases are hurting their children鈥檚 learning and work to overcome them.
鈥淭eachers go into the classroom and they are confronted with kids who are a rainbow of colors and backgrounds, and [teachers] are just woefully underprepared,鈥 said Anne T. Henderson, a senior consultant for the Community Organizing and Engagement program at the Annenberg Institute for School Reform. 鈥淚鈥檓 convinced the inequitable practice of engaging families is very much behind the disparate outcomes that we see for our more-vulnerable children.鈥
Not Out to 鈥楩ix Parents鈥
Henderson said that instead of traditional, one-way activities that aim to 鈥渇ix parents,鈥 such as lecturing parents at Back-to-School Nights, schools need to reach out to families and help them navigate schools. 鈥淧arents know when a school looks down on them,鈥 she said.
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The key is to change the relationship from one of distrust to one of respect and collaboration. 鈥淲e are moving from thinking of parents as the problem to parents as partners,鈥 said Henderson, a co-author of the 2007 book Beyond the Bake Sale.
Take Mt. Rainier Elementary School in Maryland, composed mostly of Hispanic and African-American students, about half of whom are English-language learners. Principal Shawn Hintz wanted to do more than hold a social event, such as the annual barbecue, to engage families in the education of their children and the decisions of the school.
In partnership with Teaching for Change, a nonprofit that helps schools and parents build positive connections, Mt. Rainier last year invited parents into the classroom, with translators who could help educators explain how lessons were taught so they could replicate the methods at home. Hintz also hosts regular parent-principal 鈥渃hit-chats鈥 where parents are encouraged to raise issues.
鈥淏efore, the parents would do a lot of talking amongst themselves,鈥 Hintz said. 鈥淣ow they feel more empowered to come talk to me about their concerns.鈥
Creating a Story Quilt
This year Mt. Rainier will begin a six-week story-quilt activity where parents are given different prompts (such as to talk about their first paycheck or a time when they got in trouble) and then share their experiences as they make a quilt together. They also discuss challenges in the school and begin to do some community organizing, finding power working in a collective.
鈥淚t鈥檚 based on the idea that we build meaningful relationships by sharing our stories,鈥 said Allyson Criner Brown, an associate director of Teaching for Change, in Washington. Teachers and principals are also encouraged to take part. 鈥淲e are trying to address the power dynamics in the room and looking for where there may be differences, and biases and structures that may be putting up barriers.鈥
In the Central Falls, R.I., district, drop-in 鈥渇amily rooms鈥 have been set up in schools to provide a warm, welcoming space, along with computers and a staff member who is bilingual to connect with parents before, during, and after school.
鈥淲ith so many minority families, especially if they don鈥檛 speak the language, there is this big wall in front of the school,鈥 said Joshua Wizer-Vecchi, the coordinator of a federal Investing in Innovation, or i3, grant through Children鈥檚 Friend, a Providence nonprofit that works with the district on family engagement. 鈥淢aybe you had a terrible experience or feel that you don鈥檛 have a place here. We have tried to break that down and say, 鈥楴o, no, come in.鈥 鈥
Sometimes school staff members mistakenly believe parents are not interested in their children鈥檚 educations because they don鈥檛 show up at school events. But it can be a matter of tuning into what works for the school鈥檚 diverse community.
鈥淲e are guilty of scheduling for a time that works for us,鈥 said Wizer-Vecchi, who has switched events to evenings to accommodate working families. The district also has also begun to replace pizza and pasta with rice, beans, and empanadas to appeal to Latino families.
Expanding Teacher Awareness
In Kent, Nguyen was among the parents who designed and developed a family-engagement curriculum in collaboration with teachers, administrators, and researchers from the University of Washington. The process gave parents a chance to share their experiences, create bonds, and develop priorities for improving the school together with educators, said Ann Ishimaru, an assistant professor of education at the University of Washington in Seattle, who facilitated the work.
In turn, the process raised a level of awareness for these educators about how social, cultural, and racial dynamics influence their ongoing interactions with children and families, in and out of the classroom, Ishimaru said.
Being part of the collaborative design team was 鈥渆nlightening,鈥 said Teresa Wocken-Linders, a 5th grade teacher who is white and works at Panther Lake Elementary School in Kent, which has become increasingly diverse through influxes of refugees.
鈥淚t was interesting to hear what was most important to parents鈥攊t鈥檚 not always the same thing as what seems important to staff,鈥 said Wocken-Linders.
For instance, parents were concerned about safety and wanted training on how to prevent bullying. They also thought it was important that their children develop a positive racial identity within the school system, she said.
Wocken-Linders began to ask parents about their priorities going into conferences so they had more of a shared agenda.
鈥淎s a teacher, I feel I have an increased awareness and respect for what parents know about their child and the needs of their child,鈥 she said. Now she translates more of her correspondence with parents鈥攊nto Spanish or Vietnamese, as needed鈥攗sing Google Translate. 鈥淚鈥檓 trying to be more sensitive.鈥