Personal tools

Summary: Schoolwide toolkit/parent connector network

From Oneville Wiki

Revision as of 12:18, 14 October 2011 by Jeddcohen (talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search

SCHOOLWIDE COMMUNICATION TOOLKIT: Parent Connector Network

Summary

HOW DO YOU KNOW IF YOUR SCHOOL COULD IMPROVE COMMUNICATION?

Questions to ask about the current system in your school:

➢ Can everyone who needs to get and share important school information, get and share it?
➢ Where do you put school information so that everyone in the school can see it?
➢ How do you share parent ideas around the school?
➢ What system do you have for translation and interpretation, in particular?
➢ How can you tap local bilingualism, either paying people to translate material or organizing bilingual volunteers to pitch in on translation and interpretation in a way that doesn't take too much of their time?
➢ How can you build on parent-parent relationships to pull all parents into school events and conversation?
➢ What tech training do parents need in order to get information? How could you help all parents get this training?
➢ Which efforts at parent information should be a task for school staff rather than volunteers?

WHY IS IT IMPORTANT TO IMPROVE COMMUNICATIONS?

What we found:

  • ¡Aha! Along with strong intentions to include all families, diverse schools need systems -- infrastructure -- for getting information to everyone and input from everyone.
  • ¡Aha! Overall, we’ve learned that committed and diverse parents can be expert innovators of communication infrastructure for including all parents because they have a full understanding of communication barriers.
  • ¡Aha! In a multilingual school and district in particular, improving communications -- and strengthening relationships between families and educators -- requires creating a standing infrastructure for effectively tapping a key local resource: bilingualism.

OUR MODEL FOR IMPROVING COMMUNICATION Parent Connector Network Model:

(2)Slide3-.jpg

Overview and Key Findings

Expanded Story