If families are to work with schools as partners in education
(1)
______ of their children, schools must provide them with the
opportunities and support their need to become involved. Too often
schools expect families to do it all alone. Developing effective partners
(2) ______
with families requires that all school staff (administrators,
teachers, and support staff) create a school environment welcomes parents
(3)
______ and encourages them to raise questions and voice their concerns as
well as to participate appropriately in decision making.
Developing partnerships also requires that school staff provide parents
with the information and training they need them to become involved
(4)
______ and they reach out to parents with invitations to participate in
their (5) ______
children’s learning. Schools that are most successful on
engaging parents and other
(6) ______ family members in support of their
children’s learning look beyond traditional definitions of parent
involvement--participating in a parent-teacher organization or signing on
quarterly report cards--to a broader
(7) ______ conception of parents as full
partners in the education of their children. Rather than striving only to
enlarge parent participation in school-based
(8) ______ activities, successful schools
seek to support families in their activities outside of school that can
encourage their children’s learning. Schools that have developed successful
partnerships with parents view student achievement as a sharing
responsibility,
(9) ______ and all stakeholders--including parents, administrators,
teachers, and community leaders--play important roles in supporting
children’s learning. Successful school-family partnerships
require the sustained mutual collaboration, support, and participation of
school staffs and families at home and at school in activities that can
directly effect the success
(10) ______ of children’s learning.