Strengthening Programs and Summative Evaluations Through Formative Evaluations  

   
 
 

Promoting Involvement of Recent Immigrant Families

in Their Children's Education

 

 

Shari Golan and Dana Petersen, SRI International

HFRP Harvard Family Research Project

FINE Family Involvement Network of Educators

 

Purpose

The purpose of this article is to present a conceptual framework and promote promising practices for involving Hispanic, immigrant parents/caregivers of students in their children's education. Toward this end, the article presents a model for how teachers and immigrant parents/families can be trained and encouraged to work as partners to improve student performance. The model was developed in partnership with one community organization providing these services and refined on the basis of a formative evaluation. The formative evaluation identified specific practices that appear to be particularly effective when working with recent immigrants. The impact of these practices on parent attitudes and behaviors, including parent-teacher interactions, and on student performance will be examined through a summative evaluation scheduled

to begin in May 2002.

 

Theoretical Framework

Research over the past 30 years has shown that parents are critical contributors to student achievement (Henderson & Berla, 1994; Thorkildsen & Stein, 1998; U.S. Department of Education, 1994). Federal, state, and local policymakers now encourage parental involvement through program requirements and funding opportunities.  However, many barriers arise when families, especially those who are new to this country, try to become more involved in their children's education and with their children's schools. Many parents experience language barriers, miscommunications that arise from different cultural perspectives on parent-teacher involvement and on how students learn, previous negative experiences with schools as students and parents, feelings of intimidation based on limited educational experience, and unfamiliarity with the U.S. school system (Nicolau & Ramos, 1990).

 

Research also suggests that many low-income Hispanic families find the school system to be impersonal, insensitive to their needs and situations, and often disrespectful (Garcia, 1990). This experience has resulted in deep-seated fears and attitudes among many Hispanic parents toward the school, such as the fear of being put down, either overtly or covertly. In addition, few teachers are explicitly trained in working with families (Chavkin & Williams, 1988) and some may view parents, particularly immigrant and low-income parents, as liabilities rather than assets in children's educational pursuits (Nicolau & Ramos, 1990).

 

The Parent Institute for Quality Education (PIQE) aims to increase parents' knowledge and skills to support the academic achievement of their children. For 15 years, PIQE has developed and widely implemented a model for increasing parent involvement in K-12 schools where parent participation has been difficult to achieve. PIQE uses informal education techniques that have been promoted by Paulo Freire and others dedicated to promoting social change, such as using dialogue to build community and social capital, situating educational activity in the lived experience of participants, and raising participants' consciousness about their situations and their own power to take informed action.

 

Methods and Data Sources

 

Observations

 

Interviews

Researchers interviewed 24 parents, 6 instructors, 6 school principals, and 18 teachers across the 6 schools. All parents were Spanish speaking, and the majority were recent immigrants.

 

All observations and interviews were guided by semi structured protocols based on PIQE's theory of change model and were conducted by Spanish-speaking researchers. 

 

Results

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Conclusion

Many researchers have found that parent involvement in schools is an effective strategy for promoting student achievement. Yet schools struggle with ways to recruit and involve parents, especially recent immigrant parents. The barriers that discourage immigrant parents from participating in schools are not insurmountable. This article presents specific practices that are effective at recruiting and working with typically hard-to-involve parents. Although the needs of immigrant parents are similar to those of U.S.-born parents (e.g., both desire information about school policies, school programs, and their children's academic and social progress, access to support services, and meaningful opportunities to participate in their children's education), the ways to meet these parents' needs effectively differ. The PIQE program offers a model for meeting some of the key needs of Hispanic immigrant parents, the fastest-growing community in the United States, according to the 2000 Census.

 

PIQE recognizes that changing parents' attitudes and behaviors will have only a limited effect if the attitudes and behaviors of school staff remain the same. Therefore, PIQE  recently has added a teacher education component to its model to expand the program's impact. The conceptual framework will guide the examination of whether and how parents and teachers work together to support greater student learning and how much the PIQE program affects their interactions.

 

1          Formative evaluation is a type of evaluation that provides information for strengthening a program by assessing the quality of its content and delivery.

2          Summative evaluation is a type of evaluation used to judge the effectiveness of a program at achieving its intended outcomes.

3          When we talk about parent or family involvement in education, we mean the involvement of any adult family member or guardian in a child's education through home or school activities.

4          A cum file includes a student's course of study, grades, attendance, testing results, disciplinary actions, other information submitted by faculty, and sometimes additional information such as an Individualized Education Plan.


References