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Ethan Demme

Thoughts and Policy for Building a Better Pennsylvania

  • Education Reform
  • Parental Engagement
  • Public Policy
  • Lifelong Learning
  • Lancaster County
  • Education Reform
  • Parental Engagement
  • Public Policy
  • Lifelong Learning
  • Lancaster County
  • Education Reform
  • Parental Engagement
  • Public Policy
  • Lifelong Learning
  • Lancaster County

engagement

Parents and Principals Matter

March 23, 2015

As we have discussed many times on this blog, parents matter and keeping them engaged is vitally important. Principals matter too and they are often the most important people when it comes to increasing parent engagement. In the short video below, school principals talk about the importance of parents and parental engagement in schools.

Also, check out this short video from The Atlantic about a principal devoted to her students, a photographer intent on sharing humans with humanity, and a school transformed by a campaign of compassionate generosity.

Filed Under: Parental Engagement Tagged With: community, engagement, parents, principals, schools, trust parents

Infographic – The Effect of Parental Engagement in Education

September 6, 2013

Today I ran across this great infographic over at InformEd. Yet another reminder of the importance of parental engagement in education. Also to note in this is the fact that one involved parent is good but two is best.

The influence of parental involvement on a student’s academic success should not be underestimated. While brain power, work ethic, and even genetics all play important roles in student achievement, the determining factor comes down to what kind of support system she has at home.

Students with two parents operating in supportive roles are 52% more likely to enjoy school and get straight A’s than students whose parents are disengaged with what’s going on at school. This is especially the case during the earliest years of schooling, in Kindergarten through the 5th grade, when students with active parents are almost twice as likely to succeed. Once students enter middle school, the effect diminishes slightly—possibly because they are maturing during this time— but there is still a 22% difference.

Filed Under: Education Reform Tagged With: education, engagement, infographic, parental, report, study

  • Education Reform
  • Parental Engagement
  • Public Policy
  • Lifelong Learning
  • Lancaster County

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