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Preparing Educators to Engage Families: Case Studies Using an Ecological Systems Framework 2nd Revised edition [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 200 pages, kõrgus x laius: 231x187 mm, kaal: 340 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Jan-2010
  • Kirjastus: SAGE Publications Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1412974372
  • ISBN-13: 9781412974370
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 200 pages, kõrgus x laius: 231x187 mm, kaal: 340 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Jan-2010
  • Kirjastus: SAGE Publications Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1412974372
  • ISBN-13: 9781412974370

Read Holly Kreider's blog at http://www.public2private.org/

This blog offers reflections on parenting and schooling, as told from the perspective of a family involvement researcher and single mother of two school-age children.

Research-based teaching cases that reflect critical dilemmas in family-school-community relations

Pairing child development theory with research-based teaching cases that reflect vital issues in family-school-community relations, especially among families for whom poverty and cultural differences are daily realities, this Second Edition encourages educators to hone their analytic and problem-solving skills for use in real-world situations with students and their families.

Key Features

  • Research-based teaching cases and theoretical perspectives help educators connect theory and research to practice in family engagement, honing problem-solving skills for real-world dilemmas of practice.
  • The overarching social ecological systems framework increases understanding of the multiple contexts of children's lives and how families, schools, and communities can best support child development.
  • Original research with families and schools provides valuable perspectives and skills for engaging families who have, in many instances, been underserved by our educational system.

Arvustused

"Professors, in particular, seeking a compelling and interesting text regarding family engagement should consider Preparing Educators to Engage Families. It can enhance existing courses or serve as a stand alone text for a specific course on family engagement. Students will find the text invaluable in terms of how they will learn to respect all families and better understand other points of view, and they will learn to view families from a strength perspective as opposed to a deficit perspective." -- Michelle H. Abrego and Jesus Chuey Abrego

Preface xi
New to the Second Edition xii
Acknowledgments xvii
Introduction: Preparing Educators in Family Engagement xix
About Family Engagement in Education xx
Shared Responsibility for Family Engagement xx
Continuity of Family Engagement xxiii
Ecology of Family Engagement xxv
Educational Context of Family Engagement xxvi
Cases and Theoretical Perspectives on Family Engagement xxviii
The Microsystem xxx
The Mesosystem xxx
The Exosystem xxxi
The Macrosystem xxxi
The Chronosystem xxxii
How to Use the Casebook xxxii
How to Use the Case Method xxxv
PART I. THE MICROSYSTEM
1(24)
Theoretical Perspectives on the Microsystem
2(10)
Motivation to Learn
2(5)
Theoretical Frameworks for Understanding Children's Motivation to Learn
3(1)
The Three Cs: Competence, Control, and Connection
4(1)
Conclusion
5(1)
Implications for Educators
5(2)
A Developmental-Contextual Perspective
7(5)
The Research
8(2)
Conclusion
10(1)
Implications for Educators
10(2)
The Microsystem Cases
12(13)
A Special Education Plan for Anabela: Does Supporting Her Needs Mean Holding Her Back?
12(6)
My Favorite Subject Is Lunch: Motivating a Disengaged Student
18(7)
PART II. THE MESOSYSTEM
25(36)
Theoretical Perspectives on the Mesosystem
26(12)
Social Executive Functioning
26(6)
Conclusion
30(1)
Implications for Educators
30(2)
Community Support for Family Engagement in Children's Learning
32(6)
Community Bridging Strategies
33(1)
Community Organizations as Change Agents
34(2)
Conclusion
36(1)
Implications for Educators
36(2)
The Mesosystem Cases
38(23)
Lunchtime at Sunnydale Elementary School: What Do First Graders Need?
38(7)
Defining ``Fine'': Communicating Academic Progress to Parents
45(8)
Bilingual Voices and Parent Classroom Choices: Family Engagement in Language and Literacy
53(8)
PART III. THE EXOSYSTEM
61(22)
Theoretical Perspectives on the Exosystem
62(6)
School-Based Family Support
62(6)
Family Support Premises
63(3)
Conclusion
66(1)
Implications for Educators
67(1)
The Exosystem Cases
68(15)
Afterschool for Cindy: Family, School, and Community Roles in Out-of-School Time
68(8)
Piecing It Together: Linking Systems to Support a Student and Family
76(7)
PART IV. THE MACROSYSTEM
83(36)
Theoretical Perspectives on the Macrosystem
84(13)
Ecocultural Understanding
84(6)
The Cultural Project of Development
86(1)
Developmental Outcomes
87(1)
Middle Childhood as an Ecocultural Project
88(1)
Conclusion
89(1)
Implications for Educators
89(1)
Ethnic and Racial Diversity
90(7)
Theoretical Issues
90(1)
Cultural Considerations in the Development of Ethnic and Racial Minority Children
91(3)
Minority Status and Social Disadvantage
94(1)
Conclusion
95(1)
Implications for Educators
95(2)
The Macrosystem Cases
97(22)
What Words Don't Say: Talking About Racism
97(6)
Raising Children Alone: Poverty, Welfare Reform, and Family Engagement
103(7)
Learning in the Shadow of Violence: Community, Culture, and Family Engagement
110(9)
PART V. THE CHRONOSYSTEM
119(24)
Theoretical Perspectives on the Chronosystem
120(6)
Families, Time, and Learning
120(6)
Family Engagement Across Ages
121(1)
Family Engagement Across the Day and Year
122(1)
Family Engagement Across Historical, Political, and Cultural Periods
122(1)
Conclusion
123(1)
Implications for Educators
124(2)
The Chronosystem Cases
126(17)
Tomasito Is Too Big to Hold Hands: The Developing Child and the Home-School Relationship
126(8)
Staying on the Path Toward College: One Boy at the Crossroads
134(9)
Glossary 143(3)
References 146(12)
Index 158(2)
About the Authors 160(2)
About the Contributors 162
Heather B. Weiss is founder and director of the Harvard Family Research Project (HFRP; www.hfrp.org) and senior research associate/instructor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. Founded in 1983, HFRPs mission is to improve practice, intervention, and policy to support childrens successful development from birth to adulthood. Dr. Weiss and her HFRP colleagues conduct, synthesize, and disseminate research and evaluation information and develop professional and organizational learning tools that support evaluation, continuous improvement, and accountability and that spark innovation. A cornerstone of HFRPs work is the promotion, documentation, and assessment of complementary learning: strategies that support childrens learning and development in family and community settings as well as school contexts. Under Dr. Weisss leadership, HFRP created the national Family Involvement Network of Educators (FINE); informed policy development in the areas of children, youth and families; and significantly expanded its complementary learning resources to include early childhood education, afterschool and expanded learning time opportunities, and digital media and learning. Dr. Weiss writes, speaks, and advises on programs and policies for children and families and is a consultant and advisor to numerous foundations on strategic grant making and evaluation. Her recent publications focus on reframing research and evaluation to support continuous improvement and results-based decision making, examining the case for complementary learning from a research and policy perspective, and assessing new ways of providing and evaluating professional development. Dr. Weiss received her EdD in education and social policy from Harvard University.

Holly Kreider is program officer in family engagement at the Heising-Simons Foundation in Los Altos, California. Dr. Kreider leads family engagement grant making for the Foundation, including direct service grants in local counties, as well as state- and national-level research, evaluation, and policy grants. Previously, Dr. Kreider served as director of programs for Raising A Reader National Office, overseeing training, evaluation, and affiliate relations with 165 agencies across the United States. She also previously served as vice president at Sociometrics, leading federally funded and private sector research and evaluation projects focused on childrens mental health, adolescent pregnancy prevention, HIV/STI prevention, and family strengthening. Finally, Dr. Kreider was a research associate at the Harvard Family Research Project (HFRP) and an instructor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education for more than a decade. At HFRP, she managed research projects and developed best practice resources in areas of family engagement, out-of-school time, teacher professional development, and program evaluation. At HFRP, she also cofounded the Family Involvement Network of Educatorsa national network of more than 12,000 educators and other professionals committed to engaging families in their childrens education. She is author/editor of four books and dozens of publications, including Promising Practices for Family Engagement in Out-of-School Time (IAP, 2011) and Promising Practices for Engaging Families in Literacy (IAP, 2013). Dr. Kreider received her EdD in human development and psychology from Harvard University.

M. Elena Lopez is associate director at the Harvard Family Research Project. Her research interests focus on the relationships of families, schools, and communities in childrens development and education. She has co-led evaluations of public and philanthropic initiatives to promote childrens well-being, created tools to facilitate family engagement for high school success and college and career readiness, and provided technical assistance to states and communities in order support quality programs for young children and families. As a cofounder of the Family Involvement Network of Educators, a national network of more than 12,000 preK12 educators, Dr. Lopez seeks to facilitate the usability of research in practice, policy, and professional development. Her other professional experiences include lecturing at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, working as a program officer for a philanthropic foundation, and serving on national advisory and governing boards. She is author/coauthor of numerous articles about family engagement in education. Dr. Lopez received her PhD in anthropology from Harvard University.

Celina Chatman-Nelson (Ph.D, Rutgers University) is a Visiting Program Associate in the College of Education at the University of Illinois at Chicago, where she directs a project aiming to identify challenges and solutions in preparing early childhood teachers to work with all young children and their families. She was formerly associate director for the Herr Research Center for Children and Social Policy at Erikson Institute, and prior to that she was associate director for the Center for Human Potential and Public Policy at the University of Chicagos Harris Graduate School of Public Policy Studies. Chatman-Nelson also worked as a Senior Research Associate at the University of Michigans Institute for Social Research and Institute for Research on Women and Gender, where she led analyses on adolescent identity and achievement motivation in the context of race and ethnicity. Other edited volumes include Developmental Pathways Through Middle Childhood (Lawrence Erlbaum, 2005, with Catherine Cooper, Cynthia Garcia Coll, W. Todd Bartko and Helen Davis) and Navigating the Future: Social Identity, Coping, and Life Tasks (Russell Sage Foundation, 2005, with Geraldine Downey and Jacquelynne S. Eccles). Dr. Chatman-Nelson received her PhD in social psychology from Rutgers University.