Monday, November 23, 2020

Caring School Community Impact

It is undeniably essential to have a parent involvement plan integrated into the school processes and is the responsibility of the leader to employ such a program. Planning on a school campus should involve faculty, staff, and especially parents and caregivers. This is not only professionally the correct thing to do, it is a requirement for many accreditation programs such as the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC) which is the accrediting body in California. It is also one of the requirements of the new Federal Local Control Accountability Plan (LCAP). According to the accreditation programs and the California Department of Education, school planning and development is the responsibility of all stakeholders.

As is the requirement, the research also reports schools are more successful when all stakeholders are involved. Culture shifts happen to the positive when people have ownership of their school. Teachers report that there are three areas that can improve the connectedness of a school community: embracing the role of technology as an outreach to the community; providing time for teachers to develop the social and emotional well-being of their students; and creating a common language centered on the professional best practices. Everyone can be contributing members of the team because it is not only teachers that makes a difference. Before anyone speaks to the teacher, they enter the office and should be met with a team of people that are all working toward the same goal, which is the success of the students.

There are many California community organizations that have outreach programs to get community members involved. Two of them that have a focus on family engagement are the County Office of Education in California and the County Health Department. Other organizations that provide family supports, other than schools, include: Preschool programs, family resource centers, home visiting programs, local behavioral health programs, city recreation departments, and organizational health programs.

The bottom line is that “It takes a Village” is more than just a saying. Until next time...

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