|
|
James Vopat
Year: 1994
Media: 248 pp/paper ISBN: 978-157110-001-6 Grade Range: K-8
Item No.: WMW-0001
Price: $24.00
Flat-rate shipping $5.00
|
Table of Contents | About the Author(s) | Reviews
Involving parents in their children's schooling is a matter of intense concern in North America. Teachers and administrators want to construct a program that creates positive involvement. This is especially critical for Chapter I schools that are mandated to use a portion of their funds for home-and-school programs. Jim Vopat believes that parental involvement should strengthen the link between home and school, and to achieve this goal parents need to be introduced to the revitalized school classroom. The Parent Project calls on the most powerful aspects of school reform--workshops, journals, cooperative groups, shared reading, agenda building, interviewing, goal setting, and critical thinking-classroom learning strategies experienced by children every day. When parents work with these strategies, they understand them and discover how to support them. Using a workshop/process model, parents become involved with their children's classroom activities and are thus empowered to support their children's education. These workshops ensure participant ownership of a program's overall agenda while providing long-term structures for support and continued development. The Parent Project: - Provides a framework for implementing ways to get parents involved and informed.
- Was developed in urban bilingual school settings and includes workshop formats in Spanish and English.
- Is a complete source-book for teaches and principals that provides materials for conducting workshops with parents in areas of writing, reading, self-esteem, and community-building.
- Supports your efforts with a detailed description of what the workshop approach is and how it functions.
Table of Contents
Preview this book online!
You will need the latest version of Adobe Flash Player to browse this book. Contents Chapter 1: An Introduction to the Parent Project
Chapter 2: Our Philosophy for the Parent Project
Chapter 3: How to Begin the Parent Project
Chapter 4: Workshop Structure and Ambiance
Chapter 5: Journals
Chapter 6: Circle of Belief
Chapter 7: Beyond Workshop 1: A Three-Year Plan
Chapter 8: Workshops Anyone?
Chapter 9: Publication
Chapter 10: Evaluation
Chapter 11: Advocacy
Chapter 12: Frequently Asked Questions About the Parent Project
Resources: Organization and Administration and Workshop Materials
Read On: The Best Endings Are Beginnings and Works Cited
|
About the Author(s)
Jim's been teaching teachers in unusual settings for thirty years. As founding director of the Milwaukee Writing Project, he works directly with teachers and schools. Through the Parent Project, he directs parent-teacher leadership projects in Milwaukee > More
Reviews
Rethinking Schools - 1996 "For any educator looking to increase the effectiveness of parental involvement, The Parent Project will be a welcome resource." Rethinking Schools, 1996 Teacher Reports - "The Parent Project will appeal to all teachers and administrators who want to work as equal partners with parents to involve them in, and inform them about, their children's education." Teacher Reports Teaching K-8 - September 1997 "Absolutely the best workshop approach to parent involvement I've ever seen." Teaching K-8, September 1997
|
| Other Titles
by the Author |
|
|
|