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First published in 1968, this book was for every parent who had ever wondered ‘What goes on in my child’s school – whom do I ask, what do I ask, and dare I ask?’; and for every teacher who had ever thought, ‘How can I get closer to parents and enlist their aid in what I am trying to teach?’ The author was a junior-school head teacher.



Originally published in 1968, this book was for every parent who had ever wondered ‘What goes on in my child’s school – whom do I ask, what do I ask, and dare I ask?’; and for every teacher who had ever thought, ‘How can I get closer to parents and enlist their aid in what I am trying to teach?’ At the time Lawrence Green was a junior-school head teacher with long experience in the ‘deprived’ areas of a large city – and had two children at school. His articles on parent-teacher cooperation in the magazine ‘Where?’ aroused very wide interest and led to reviews in the national press and appearances on the BBC and ITV. Requests for details of his two-way reports – in which parents were invited to give the school a picture of the child at home – were received from all over the world.

This is a practical and deeply-felt book, a living illustration of the kind of cooperation which could make the Plowden Report a reality. It deals frankly with the difficulties of starting and maintaining links between home and school, but describes the kind of success which could be achieved. The intention was that it should be read by all who cared about education and wanted to cross the line which too often separated parent and teacher at the time. Today it can be read in its historical context.

Arvustused

Reviews for the original edition:

Teachers and parents who simply want to do their best for their children will learn a lot from Mr Green. The Daily Telegraph

Written with feeling and conviction. Teachers World

His modest, practical account of how he achieved maximum parent participation in his own school is closer to the classroom than anything yet published on the subject. New Education

here is no homily but a working handbook that no good parent or teacher should be without. Morning Star

a book for every school library and many a home bookshelf. Western Mail

skilfully guides parents through the pitfalls and maze of how to find out what is going on in their particular schools. Evening News

It ought to be made compulsory reading for every serving LEA member. Municipal Journal

nothing but good can come from the suggestions so lucidly set down in this book. - Tribune

Preface. Acknowledgements.
1. No Parents Beyond This Line.
2. An
Attempt at Improvement
3. School Reports
4. Interviews With Parents
5. School
Functions
6. Informal Contacts
7. Case Studies (I) Effect of Parent-Teacher
Cooperation on the Child
8. Case Studies (II) Recording Home Interviews
9.
Prospects for the Future. Appendix. Index.
Lawrence Green, was at the time of publication, working as a junior-school headteacher for the Inner London Education Authority.