Paul Campbell (North Lanarkshire Council) and Susan Liveston (Glasgow City Council) - Presentation at the National Parent Forum of Scotland Annual Conference (https://blogs.glowscotland.org.uk/glowblogs/NPF/category/conference/) on the Future of parental partnership in a changing Scottish policy context.
Npf conference 2012 paul campbell and susan liveston - final - copy
1. Paul Campbell â Clarkston Primary
School
Susan Liveston â Hyndland Primary
School
2. But we donât claim to
have a panacea, to
know everything Provocative and
about effective challenging
parental partnership ideas/questions?
in learning or to have
all the answers to the We can promise that.
questions we are
raising.
- Japanese Proverb
3. ⢠Commitment to the area of working with families.
⢠Recognition and understanding of wider policy area and implications
on practice.
⢠Focus for practice, professional learning and development and under
continual review.
⢠Engagement with the wider education debate.
⢠Share, discuss, challenge ideas, engage with a wider demographic
of partners in education.
⢠Share what we see as important and key next steps for progression
and improvement.
4. ⢠Curriculum for Excellence (CfE) â Building the Curriculum
⢠Getting It Right For Every Child (GIRFEC)
⢠Advancing Professionalism in Teaching â McCormac
⢠Teaching Scotlandâs Future â Donaldson
⢠Commission on School Reform
⢠Quality and Improvement in Scottish Education Report
⢠Curriculum for Excellence Impact Reports
5. WHAT?
WHO?
HOW?
⢠The Journey from Good to Great to Excellent
⢠Involvement, expectations and rights of the relevant partners in the
education and learning of our children and young people
6. ⢠Time
⢠Family circumstances
⢠Geography
⢠Lack of confidence
⢠Unfamiliarity
With barriers come ideas and approaches that can
overcome them. But it takes time, as well as active and
sustained dialogue between relevant stakeholders with a
practical focus on improving experiences, achievements
and outcomes of all learners.
7. ⢠System wide variation:
Healthy but practically there are wide unfortunate
variations.
How do we embed the key elements â agree the key
elements?
⢠Agreed broad national framework to allow for local
interpretation:
Positive and necessary but can be a potential challenge.
⢠Sharing local innovation.
⢠Redefining the policy-maker.
8. ⢠What is parental involvement?
Consider the following reflective questions in groups of 2-4.
1. What do you consider to be effective parental
involvement and in what way does it happen in your
establishment/ associated educational setting/ sector?
2. How are you supporting/ encouraging effective and
meaningful involvement of parents in their childâs
learning?
9. Effective partnership and involvement has to start with communication.
Communication is key to having effective and meaningful partnership with
parents.
It takes a tailored, relevant approach agreed by all involved.
This can be done in a variety of ways:-
⢠Face-to-face appointments
⢠Chats at the gate
⢠Letters/notes
⢠Phone calls
⢠Class blogs
⢠Twitter/ Facebook/ GLOW page and updates
⢠Drop in sessions
⢠Open mornings/afternoons
Considerations (not exhaustive):
communication preferences, time commitments and constraints, personal
and social circumstances, required tools/ input, expectations
10. ⢠Establishing effective practice at local levels with mechanisms to
collaborate a share between professionals, parents and community
partners, devised, developed and sustained locally.
⢠Broader range of communication tools and mechanisms advocated and
in place; harnessing the full potential of technology and social media.
⢠Greater involvement of the âeveryday, busyâ parent and teacher
(childrenâs learning, school life, policy development and decision
making)
⢠Move beyond the âcall for evidenceâ, âopportunities to respondâ,
ârepresentatives from all partiesâ to a model of localised community
partnership working/implementation (and interpretation)/review groups
(e.g. curriculum, qualifications, assessment, reporting, partnership
mechanisms)
âŚwith regular meaningful opportunities for feeding back to national
groups/bodies.
11. ⢠We know itâs right.
⢠Our children deserve the best; better than we are doing.
⢠The school as the community hub.
⢠Reconceptualising the learning process â there is still
work to do. Not just at policy level, but practically and
meaningfully.
⢠Valuing what our children and young people value.
12. ⢠Curriculum News / Newsletters and updates
⢠Homework Log â tips/hints and two way communication
⢠Letters communicated to and from parents
⢠Being available to talk to parents outside at the end of the day
⢠Appointments to talk to individual parents
⢠Open door system for all
⢠Open days
⢠Meet the Teacher
⢠Display of Work
⢠Parent helpers
⢠Class Blogs
⢠Shared Learning Journals
⢠Personal Learning Plans
⢠Peer-initiated and led professional learning networks
⢠Openness to new ideas and approaches
⢠Engagement in the wider policy debate
⢠Commitment to career long professional learning and development
⢠Commitment to engaging with parents, families and community partners to
ensure the best experiences and achievements possible
13. ⢠Complete the table by identifying all the parental
involvement opportunities that are offered by your school
or establishment.
⢠On a scale of 1 to 6, grade their success in terms of (for
example) raising achievement, positive pupil
attitudes, behaviours and attendance, and encouraging
parental participation (with 1 being the least successful
and 6 the most successful).
⢠Identify what made it successful.
14. There isnât a panacea, Reflection.
there arenât answers Ideas.
to all the challenging Communication.
questions. But there Evaluation.
are actions to go with Revolution.
visions. Transformation.
- Japanese Proverb
Editor's Notes
Healthy but practically there are wide unfortunate variations which means parents and children arenât getting the best from parents as partners (is there an excuse?) but we know what elements of good practice look like with principles that underpinning innovative localised practice across Scotland. So we are not advocating more prescriptive frameworks and guidelines. Weâre saying finding a way of fostering the sharing of local innovative practice amongst colleagues, parents and community groups, and a clearer defined route to share this on a larger scale which relies on a systemic change of our definition of the policy maker and the opportunities we afford parents, communities and the profession to engaged in the agreed principles that underpin policy development and implementation.