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21. I Teach 1st: SESSIONS Day 4
getting parents involved in Early Literacy with Sherri Strating G13 TheGuided Reading Teaching Sequence Betty Jo Evers
http://www.iteach1st.com/Sessions-Day4.htm
session details— Wednesday, July 13, 2005 Sessions with this symbol are presented by our proud conference sponsor, ETA Cuisenaire Sessions with the Make-and-Take symbol offer hands-on projects you can bring back to your classroom. CP Sessions with this symbol are offered by current classroom practitioners. Table Talk Sessions: 7:30 - 8:20 am
Take advantage of a roundtable discussion to share problems and offer solutions. Plus, earn an additional hour of staff development credit.
  • Get a Grip! Developing Fine Motor Skills in First Graders with Tere Bowen-Irish, OTR/L The First 30 Days of First Grade with Cheryl Apgar Celebrating All Cultures in the First Grade Classroom with Tricia Obester Using Computers in the First Grade Classroom with Julie Raschen Getting Parents Involved in Early Literacy with Sherri Strating
Full-Morning Sessions 8:30 - 11:30 AM G-1 Author Visit: The Wonder of Words Brian Cleary
Self-proclaimed word nerd, Brian Cleary, talks about his exposure to words and literature from first grade and beyond. He’ll also share his passion for rich language as well as several of his own word-oriented lesson plans he’s used successfully across the country.

22. Birmingham MI Lacrosse Getting Involved
Take this chance to teach him that officials are trying to do their best, Some parents can t get to many of their child s games or spend a lot of time
http://www.birminghamlacrosse.com/get involved.html
Ways you can get involved
Areas of support
Help your child earn good grades
Your child's grades in school are more important than lacrosse. Even the finest lacrosse player can not make it into a good college if he has poor grades.
Help your child with lacrosse skills
Most important is fun no one gets rich or famous by playing lacrosse.
Even if you never played lacrosse, you can learn about lacrosse. Take your child to nearby lacrosse games.
Encourage your child to explain the game of lacrosse to you, your spouse, his grandparents, whoever. When your child is teaching you about lacrosse, he is teaching himself.
Ask your child questions about the things you don't understand.
Buy a second lacrosse attack stick and play catch with your child. The fancy term is "bonding," but parent and child playing catch is a great way for him to develop skills, too. Go out and watch your son or daughter play. Cheer him on. Take this chance to teach him that officials are trying to do their best, but they make mistakes just like every player and coach. The three essential lacrosse-specific skills are throwing, catching and cradling the ball. To practice the three essentials, all you need is a lacrosse stick, a lacrosse ball and a wall. Just throwing the ball against the wall and attempting to catch it is one of the best drills there is.

23. Science Learning Area - Case Studies - Swanbourne Senior High School
This shift to teaching, learning and assessment that focuses on students developing the ATP centre, busy bees, getting parents involved in the program,
http://www.eddept.wa.edu.au/science/teach/tea143.htm
Science
Updated: Feb 2000
Case Studies of Integrated Teaching

Case Studies - Swanbourne Senior High School
Integrating Science and Mathematics Through Technology-based Projects Swanbourne Senior High School Swanbourne Senior High School is a metropolitan high school on the western coastal strip in Perth Western Australia. The school has an Academic Talented Program (ATP) with a focus on Science and Mathematics which draws gifted students from a variety of backgrounds and from many areas in Perth. The Academic Talented Program comprises three classes, one in each of Years 8, 9 and 10. The three ATP classes attend separate Science, Mathematics and Technology lessons, however, over the past two years the teachers of these subjects have collaborated in order to synchronise and integrate the content and processes being taught in the three learning areas. The major ingredient of the integration has been technology-driven projects incorporating Science and Mathematics components. Background The Academic Talented Program was introduced to the school in 1995 with a focus on Science and Mathematics.

24. Albuquerque Tribune Online
She s cracking down on instruction, insisting teachers teach from bell to bell.But one of her biggest challenges is getting parents involved.
http://web.abqtrib.com/archives/news03/111503_news_polk.shtml
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Learning curve Polk Middle School strains to prove it is not a failure - though it is failing by state standards - to the community, to parents and, especially, to its students
By Susie Gran
Tribune Reporter Benny Sedillo's walk through Polk Middle School every day is a hike from hopelessness to hope for something better. The struggles are clear at Polk, labeled a failing school by the state and called worse names by some neighbors. Lockers are off-limits for fear they could hide guns and drugs. Dingy metal desks scream 1960s, not 2003. Windows are scarce, graffiti an assault upon the eye. Two decades ago, Polk, 2220 Raymac Road S.W., was considered the jewel of the South Valley and won national awards. But for the last 10 years, critics say, Polk has been a place where education came to die. Now there's some hope. Benny Sedillo's family is willing to take a chance on the "new" Polk. As he ambles through the hallways, Sedillo, a seventh-grader who came to Polk this year after a year of home schooling, can see the changes - the experiment on which Polk's future rests.

25. Getting Parents More Involved In Your School, Teaching Tips Of The Week, Teachin
Teaching Today provides busy secondary teachers with teaching tips, free downloadableteaching materials, indepth articles and a host of other features.
http://www.glencoe.com/sec/teachingtoday/weeklytips.phtml/155
Teaching Today publishes innovative teaching tips on a weekly basis. Written with the busy teacher in mind, each tip is concise, practical and easy to implement in the classroom right away. Topics covered in Teaching Today are classroom management, career development, high stakes testing, instruction and planning, parental involvement, reading in the content areas, using technology in the classroom, and portfolio development. Teaching Today also offers free weekly downloads that correspond to the tips. Our free downloads make implementing the teaching tips even easier. Teaching Today provides educational resources for teachers looking for everyday solutions to the challenges of the classroom.
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This Week's Topic Getting Parents More Involved in Your School
In a recent Public Agenda survey, 78% of teachers responding reported that “too many parents don’t know what is going on with their child’s education.” Most teachers report that parental participation drops greatly with each year a child attends, starting in the elementary grades. While the reasons for decreased participation vary tremendously, most teachers agree that more parental involvement would help children succeed in school. This week, we provide five ways to increase a parent’s interest or participation in their child’s schooling. This Week's Tips
Include Parent Information in Your Newsletter
(Monday) Create a permanent spot on the front page of your newsletter or Web page specifically for notes to parents.

26. Parental Involvement, Teaching Today, Glencoe Online
Teaching Today compliments the subject areas Web sites of the Glencoe Divisionat the McGrawHill getting parents More involved in Your School
http://www.glencoe.com/sec/teachingtoday/tiparchive.phtml/2
Teaching Today publishes innovative teaching tips on a weekly basis. Written with the busy teacher in mind, each tip is concise, practical and easy to implement in the classroom right away. Topics covered in Teaching Today are classroom management, career development, high stakes testing, instruction and planning, parental involvement, reading in the content areas, using technology in the classroom, and portfolio development. Teaching Today also offers free weekly downloads that correspond to the tips. Our free downloads make implementing the teaching tips even easier. Teaching Today provides educational resources for teachers looking for everyday solutions to the challenges of the classroom.
Parental Involvement
What do you need?

Weekly Tips
Free Downloads Feature Articles
Weekly Tips
Improving Communication with Parents
Effective communication with parents can go a long way toward helping students achieve the goals you’ve set for them in school. Of course, there are a lot of parents to communicate with, so time-saving yet effective strategies are the key to making the most of your efforts. This week we provide simple ways to improve your overall effort.
Communicating With Parents
Success in the classroom depends on communication–but parents are often omitted from the communication equation. This week, we offer tips to help bring parents up to speed with classroom happenings and student progress.

27. BBC | British Council Teaching English - Resources - The Home-school Connection
Model for students how to teach their parents and vice versa The call forparental involvement in getting our students to read both in English and in
http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/think/resources/home_school2.shtml
Think - ideas on teaching Talk - feedback and communities ... Literature Resources Speaking Listening Reading Vocabulary ... Writing The home-school connection 2
Theresa Zanatta
Theresa Zanatta shows us how parents can be encouraged to create opportunities for their children to learn English at home.
Families today take many different shapes and forms. In many instances, biological parents are not always children's primary caregivers. In this article, the words families and parents are used in the inclusive sense to refer to the group of any and all people who form the main community of caregivers to children. The first article - The home-school connection 1 - gave the rationale behind involving the parents in student learning and outlined two classroom routines that help to achieve this, namely the making of hands-on learning tools which pupils take home to show their parents and the production of an English folder to store these materials. This second article offers three more classroom routines and suggestions for further reading on this topic.

28. Teaching Pre K-8: SPECIAL SECTION: Getting Parents Involved
Full text of the article, SPECIAL SECTION getting parents involved from TeachingPre K8, a publication in the field of Reference Education,
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3666/is_200504/ai_n13634510
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IN free articles only all articles this publication Automotive Sports FindArticles Teaching Pre K-8 Apr 2005 Content provided in partnership with
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ASEE Prism Academe African American Review ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports SPECIAL SECTION: Getting Parents Involved Teaching Pre K-8 Apr 2005
Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. To increase parent involvement, students kept their poetry notebooks filled with favorite poems or ones they thought parents would like. The notebooks were taken home and read with an adult. Then they were to respond to questions such as, How could you relate or connect to the poem? How did it make you feel? Did you ever feel like the poet did? Students became very involved in writing poetry without rhyme about natural beauty and also chose the theme, "My Favorite Things" to write about in free verse. They wrote, read and presented a program for their parents. A special poem was written by third grader, Cole Stengel (used with permission).

29. Get Parents Involved In Your Program
getting parents involved in Your Program Cynthia Carbone Ward The topic, ofcourse, depends upon the unit you are currently teaching.
http://www.teachersnetwork.org/ntol/howto/workfam/c15975,.htm
How To Work with
Students' Families

Getting Parents Involved i n Your Program Cynthia Carbone Ward When a new teacher asked me if I could suggest ways that he might interest and involve parents in his 8th grade social studies curriculum, I suggested that he start with a basic weekly update to the parents. A short bulletin should let them know what interesting aspects of history are being covered, the kinds of activities the kids will be doing, and ways that parents can support the educational process at home. The bulletin might include a weekly challenge question regarding a historical character or event - preferably something colorful or amusing. Variations of all of these ideas can be applied to almost any subject. Another great way to involve parents is by requiring your students to interview them. The topic, of course, depends upon the unit you are currently teaching. If it's about immigration, have them find out about their own family roots, who made the journey to this country, and stories that have been passed along. Perhaps one of their parents IS an immigrant and still remembers life in another country and the migration here. If you are teaching about the Constitution and the founding of the nation, have kids interview their parents about their understanding of what it means to be a citizen, or their recollection of the civil rights movement. This is just the tip of the iceberg with a little creativity, you can think of a provocative line of questioning which relates to just about any topic in the curriculum.

30. A Youth Sports Resource - Parents & Coaches, We Can Help!
Searching for help on how to teach your children Youth Sports and Sportsmanship? help you the parents, coaches and children involved in youth sports.
http://www.youth-sports.com/
Click below
to view:
OR
Searching for help on how to teach your children Youth Sports and Sportsmanship? You've come to the right place!!
You will find helpful information, advice and instructional products that will help you the parents, coaches and children involved in youth sports. Each section provides you with an in depth look at the particular topic. Sports Store Articles Youth Sports Newsletter - This FREE monthly email newsletter includes articles, fitness tips, healthy recipes, sports quotes, etc. Previous issues available for your review in the Archive section. Sign Up Now B. A. Good Sport Award Program - Sportsmanship award program Coloring Contest - Children ages 3-9 can win a cool T-Ball or Soccer T-shirt with "B. A. Good Sport" the Ambassador of Sportsmanship on the front. What's New - Check out the titles and descriptions of new books and videos for several exciting sports including Baseball, Basketball, Football, Soccer including an excellent video on motivational coaching. Need to Find Your Way Around?

31. Early Childhood Digest : Latino Families: Getting Involved In Your Children's Ed
Maybe parents expected schools to do all the teaching. Talk to other Latinoparents who have gotten involved with the local schools to find out what
http://www.gse.harvard.edu/hfrp/pubs/onlinepubs/ecd/apr99.html
Early Childhood Digest
Latino Families: Getting Involved in Your Children's Education
April 1999 Eliot Levine, Harvard Family Research Project This Early Childhood Digest was produced by the National Institute on Early Childhood Development and Education of the Office of Educational Research and Development in the U.S. Department of Education and is also available in Spanish Many Latino parents feel just like Lorena. They have many questions. What is parent involvement? What can I do at home to help my child learn better? How am I supposed to work with the preschools and schools in this country? Can I trust them? These are hard questions, but they are important questions. Children are more successful when their families are involved in their education. One of your roles as a parent is to make sure that your child receives the best education possible. To do this, you need to be involved! What Do Schools Want in This Country?
By schools we refer to childcare, preschool, Head Start, and kindergarten. If you grew up in Latin America, the schools might have been very different. Maybe parents expected schools to do all the teaching. In the United States, families and schools are supposed to be a team. The family is the biggest influence on a child's life, and the school is the next biggest influence. Schools expect parents to get involved, both at home and at school. Parents are supposed to ask questions. Your ideas and questions are important. The relationship between the family and the school makes a big difference in how much a child can benefit from school.

32. How To Get Parents Involved - 9.27.2000 - New York Teacher -
getting parents involved in their children s education can be frustrating at times.Faced with home and onthe-job stresses, some parents may have to
http://www.nysut.org/newyorkteacher/2000-2001/000927parents.html
September 27, 2000
How to get parents involved: Individually and through their unions, teachers are reaching out PARENT RESOURCES TEACHER RESOURCES See also: Getting parents involved in their children's education can be frustrating at times. Faced with home and on-the-job stresses, some parents may have to relegate educational issues to the back burner. Other parents want to become involved, but feel they lack the skills to help their children. Veteran teachers have evolved effective strategies to help parents become full partners in their children's education. Additionally, many local unions affiliated with New York State United Teachers are committing time and resources to initiatives that improve connections to parents. With new standards and new tests altering the educational landscape, "parents have more questions than ever before," says Antonia Cortese, NYSUT first vice president. "Teachers and their unions are committed to providing the answers and support parents need to help their children learn." Accentuate the positive Mary Ann Taylor, an instructional support teacher at Karigon Elementary School in Clifton Park and an instructor in NYSUT's Effective Teaching Program, chooses to accentuate the positive. "I like to call parents with good news, rather than bad news, about their children," said Taylor, a member of the Shenendehowa Teachers Association in Saratoga County. "Just a good news phone call to say, for example, 'Johnny had a really good day at school today. He learned to count by fives.'"

33. Tips/Parent Involvement
getting parents involved can be tricky and hard. I am currently working at aschool in the NT and parent involvement is poor. ** 1.
http://www.atozteacherstuff.com/Tips/Parent_Involvement/index.shtml
A to Z Teacher Stuff ~ Teacher Resources, Lesson Plans, Themes, Tips, Printables, and more advertise All Grades Preschool K Quick Links Teacher Downloads Free Newsletter Sites for Teachers
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Parent Involvement
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Treasure Tools for Parents and Schools
Share these simple fun-filled activities at Open House, Parent/Teacher Conferences, and Parent workshops to strengthen the connection between home and school, while also improving the reading, writing, communication, and organizational skills of your students! (From the A to Z Teacher Stuff Store - Download Now!) Teacher-Tested Tips: Communication Notebook Submitted by: Kim Bodenstab Parent provides a spiral notebook that goes back and forth from home and school daily in the child's backpack. This provides an easy way to write a note to a parent and to make sure that they know to look for it. The parent can write info to the teacher and this saves lots of time spent on phone calls. I provide a basket for the kids to place their notebooks in each morning. The students also look in the basket at the end of the day when their notebook is ready to be sent home. Encouraging and Tracking Parental Involvement Submitted by:

34. Get Parents Involved
Most educators agree that parental involvement is a key ingredient in how wella student learns. getting parents into the classroom one evening a month,
http://www.edutopia.org/magazine/ed1article.php?id=art_1310&issue=jun_05

35. Equal Opportunities For Romany Children Through School Development Programs And
by getting parents involved in the activities and the decisional policy of with both the teaching staff and the pupils, meetings with parents, etc.
http://www.egale.ro/english/proiect/experienta.html
news about us contact
Participants
... Activities Our experience F.A.Q.
Our experience
The initiators
Since 1998 till 2000 has been developed the project " Equal opportunities for Roma children through education " by the Open Society Foundation Romania (through its "Educational Department" - restructured in 2000 as Center Education 2000+) and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands (MATRA projects). Its implementation has been carried out through an active partnership of Center Education 2000+ (Bucharest - Romania) and the National Institute for Curriculum Development of The Netherlands.
Objectives
The program's aim was to provide the needed technical assistance to Roma pupils and to increase the opportunities for their integration in society by adapting the educational offer to their and their parents' needs, by setting out coherent strategies for school development, by getting parents involved in the activities and the decisional policy of the school, and by encouraging successful experiences that can be easily implemented on a larger scale. The difficulties the Roma children confront with during their school attendance have constituted the starting point for the program development, the program key-concepts being:

36. Increasing Student Engagement And Motivation: From Time-on-task To Homework: By
getting parents involved in Homework Conclusion The Northwest Sampler OregonIdaho Washington The impact of teaching strategies on intrinsic motivation.
http://www.nwrel.org/request/oct00/textonly.html
Increasing Student Engagement and Motivation: From Time-on-Task to Homework
October 2000 Northwest Regional Educational Laboratory
Table Of Contents
To the graphical version...
Foreword

Introduction

In Context:
...
Acknowledgments
Foreword
This booklet is the 14th in a series of "hot topic" reports produced by the Northwest Regional Educational Laboratory. These reports briefly address current educational concerns and issues as indicated by requests for information that come to the Laboratory from the Northwest region and beyond. Each booklet contains a discussion of research and literature pertinent to the issue, a sampling of how Northwest schools are addressing the issue, suggestions for adapting these ideas to schools, selected references, and contact information. One objective of the series is to foster a sense of community and connection among educators. Another is to increase awareness of current education-related themes and concerns. Each booklet gives practitioners a glimpse of how fellow educators are addressing issues, overcoming obstacles, and attaining success in certain areas. The goal of the series is to give educators current, reliable, and useful information on topics that are important to them. Other titles in the series include:

37. Tolerance.Org Teaching Tolerance
In my year as a Teaching Tolerance research fellow and Nolan s year in theMontgomery Were there parents, teachers or students who were not involved?
http://www.tolerance.org/teach/printar.jsp?p=0&ar=187&pi=ttm

38. How Not To Teach Math By Matthew Clavel
A guest art teacher, gungho about cooperative learning, tried to teach my kids This sounds nice—who doesn’t want to see parents involved with their
http://www.city-journal.org/html/eon_3_7_03mc.html
City Journal
Peggy Noonan
SEARCH SITE
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How Not to Teach Math
7 March 2003 It wasn’t working. We’d gone through six straight wrong answers, and now the kids were tired of feeling lost. It was only October, and already my fourth-grade public school class in the South Bronx was demoralized. Day after day of going over strange, seemingly disconnected math lessons had squelched my students’ interest in the subject. Then, quietly, 10-year-old David spoke up. “Mr. Clavel, no one understands this stuff.” He looked up at me with a defeated expression; other children nodded pleadingly. We had clearly reached a crossroads. How would Mr. Clavel, a young teacher, inexperienced but trying hard, react to David’s statement—so obvious to everyone in the class that it didn’t even require seconding? “Look,” I began, sighing deeply. “Math isn’t half as hard as you all probably think right now.” A few kids seemed relieved—at least I wasn’t just denying their problem. “There are different ways to teach it,” I continued. “I don’t want to do this either . . . so we’re not going to—at least most of the time.” I was thinking out loud now, and many of the children looked startled. What did I mean? We weren’t going to learn

39. National Center For Health Education - Advancing Private-Sector Health Education
Although getting parents involved in their children s schools is a great with their teaching load may not have the time to reach out to parents.
http://www.nche.org/ypc_school_parentinvolvement.htm
Enhancing Parent Involvement GOALS:
Educators are interested in promoting family involvement.
Educators are skillful in promoting family involvement.
Educators and parents are aware of the benefits of parent and family involvement for students, schools, and the parents themselves.
Educators and parents develop teacher-parent partnerships.
A high percentage of parents and family members are involved in various ways in their children's education.
Parents have positive attitudes and increase their skills in helping their children succeed in school.
Student achievement increases because of greater involvement from parents.
Student attitudes improve because of greater involvement from parents. What Are the Benefits of Family Involvement? Increased involvement of parents and families often is cited as one of the most important ways to improve public schools. A variety of studies confirms that parent involvement makes an enormous impact on students' attitude, attendance, and academic achievement. Although some working and single parents may be unable to contribute to schools because of work commitments and time constraints, educators are discovering many additional ways that parents can help students and their schools. Some of these ways are dependent upon the school's desire to involve parents.

40. Getting Involved At Eastside Alternative School
getting involved. Parental involvement is central to what Eastside Alternative Volunteer in the classroom; teach a Wednesday workshop; Help raise funds
http://schools.4j.lane.edu/eastside/GetInvolved.html
Getting Involved
Parental involvement is central to what Eastside Alternative School is all about. There are many different ways to get involved.
Help in the Classroom
Eastside teachers are happy to have the help of parent volunteers who can volunteer on a regular schedule in the classroom. Contact a teacher to discuss current needs, your interests, and the time you can commit to regular classroom visits.
Teach a Wednesday Workshop
Wednesday Workshops are short, one-hour classes taught by parents. If you would like to propose a topic for a Wednesday Workshop and/or offer to teach it, contact the Eastside office, 687-3303.
Help Raise Funds
Eastside parents help raise funds in several ways to support educational programs at Eastside, and help is always needed to organize fund-raising activities. Contact us at 687-3303 for information on ways you can become involved. [ More
Help a Homeless Family
Each year, Eastside helps a homeless family obtain housing. [

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