It鈥檚 indisputable that most students perform better academically when they have parents or adults to help with homework and to be advocates with teachers and principals.
But in many communities, parents who juggle multiple jobs, don鈥檛 speak much English, or have low levels of education often don鈥檛 have the time or resources to make meaningful connections to their child鈥檚 schooling experience.
That鈥檚 why some leading-edge districts have made it their job to reach out to families and create more welcoming and accessible ways for parents to be part of their children鈥檚 schooling.
In Washoe County, Nev., for example, the school district鈥檚 family-engagement work includes organizing home visits by teachers鈥攁nd training those teachers to make the most of those face-to-face encounters in students鈥 homes.
In Federal Way, Wash., the leader of family-engagement efforts taps a diverse array of parents to serve on committees or task forces that inform major decisionmaking in the district, including high-level hires.
Still, the specialized field of parent and family engagement has mostly been driven by ambitious leaders at the district level. And even in districts with robust programming, resources to support the work are often tight.
But new and potentially bigger forces are building around the need for schools and educators to forge deeper connections with parents and community members.
Philanthropists鈥攊n particular the W.K. Kellogg Foundation and the Carnegie Foundation of New York鈥攁re championing the flow of more money into family-engagement initiatives, including research to identify what efforts are effective.
And the federal budget has set aside $10 million to help fund efforts by several state education agencies and outside partners to develop strong parent and community programming.
The also directs states and districts to develop plans to work with families and surrounding communities鈥攁 requirement that has spawned a multistate endeavor to create guidelines and exemplars for schools and districts to follow.
Advocates for building strong ties between schools and families say it鈥檚 a major opportunity for a proven, yet underutilized strategy to make schools better.
鈥淭here is a lot of excitement, and more of an evolution in where both policymakers and funders feel like they want to increasingly put their money,鈥 said Vito Borrello, the executive director for the National Association for Family, School, and Community Engagement.
Leaders in Mississippi and South Carolina are already taking steps to spread successful parent-engagement efforts to communities across their states, said Kelli Gauthier, a spokeswoman for the Council of Chief State School Officers, which is working with those two states and more than a dozen others to craft the guidelines for family engagement.
In Mississippi, officials who run the state鈥檚 early-childhood education programs are working to expand the kind of hands-on efforts they use with parents of children from birth to 5 years to families of students in all grades. As students age, establishing connections to parents gets more challenging and school-led efforts to do so tends to drop off, said Borello.
Philanthropic Backing
South Carolina leaders are tapping into the state鈥檚 religious community as one tactic to help support students and families. They are recruiting churches to adopt schools and assist them in helping meet students鈥 basic needs. More than 1,500 churches across South Carolina have joined the effort.
鈥淲e ask churches to perhaps be a reading buddy to students, ask them if they may be able to do a backpack program where they fill backpacks with non-perishable items and, if possible, include a book in there, as we have a lot of kids who are not reading when not in schools,鈥 said Yoland茅 Anderson, the head of the office for family engagement in South Carolina鈥檚 education agency.
Although there鈥檚 enthusiasm about the new momentum around family engagement, especially from policymakers, it doesn鈥檛 come without challenges.
The $10 million infusion of federal money is dwarfed by earlier government investments in similar initiatives, said Borello. Before being defunded in 2011, states shared $40 million in federal money to support entities knowns as parental information resource centers.
And under the requirements of the new ESSA-related grants, state education agencies can鈥檛 directly apply for the funding, said Anderson. Independent organizations that partner with states must seek the money, making it difficult for states to ensure there鈥檚 an equitable distribution of resources, she said.
That鈥檚 why philanthropic sources of funding are especially appealing.
Officials with the Kellogg Foundation said they have given about $25 million over the last five years to support family-engagement efforts, including the multistate endeavor to write guidelines.
The foundation is also directly funding research, including a study published in 2016 that found that teachers who share their students鈥 racial identity or linguistic backgrounds are generally more successful at building trusting relationships with parents and families, said Jenefer O鈥橠ell, a program officer with the Kellogg Foundation.
鈥淲e want to help the school system move away from looking at family engagement as a one-time program or collection of random events, like fundraisers such as a bake sale, and focus more on looking at sustainable ways in how parents and families are constantly incorporated in every aspect of the learning settings within the school,鈥 she said.
The Carnegie Corporation of New York has funded family-engagement programs in the past. But officials there increasingly see it as a priority, thanks to research showing its effectiveness and ESSA鈥檚 push for states to consider ways to get 鈥渟takeholders鈥 more involved, chiefly parents, said Ambika Kapur, an education program officer at Carnegie Corporation.
The foundation wanted to first get a snapshot of where family engagement was in the philanthropic world, and surveyed 150 foundations. Carnegie found that they collectively poured about $230 million into family engagement, and nearly half were newer foundations pumping money into the cause鈥攁 confirmation that the support for this work was real.
鈥淭he more we went deeper in learning about research about successful educational reforms, we found that the greatest influence on students is the family,鈥 Kapur said.
In just the past year, Carnegie has worked with DonorsChoose.org to offer about $500,000 toward matching鈥攄ollar for dollar鈥攚hat teachers raise themselves, and supporting burgeoning nonprofits. Such nonprofits include EdNavigator, an organization that sends advisers into parents鈥 workplaces鈥攚ith employers鈥 cooperation and financial support鈥攖o offer help and advice on how to advocate for their children at school.
Making Equity a Priority
While family engagement again may be fashionable in education reform, educators in districts that have long championed the approach have a few suggestions for those jumping on the bandwagon.
鈥淚t鈥檚 vital to have a culturally responsive lens in however you shape the outreach,鈥 said Trise Moore, the head of family and community engagement for the Federal Way school district near Seattle.
O鈥橠ell, of Kellogg, agreed, saying it鈥檚 vital for policymakers and funders to incorporate awareness of racial inequity into family-engagement programs, as it鈥檚 part of the foundation鈥檚 鈥淒NA.鈥
To help, Kellogg has issued its own set of guiding principles for promoting racial equity in family engagement to help peers working in education to address such nuanced challenges.
Moore also emphasized that in a data-driven education reform culture it鈥檚 important to remember that some positive outcomes are not easily quantifiable, such as the 鈥渟elf-efficacy that a parent will gain鈥 through family engagement work.
鈥淵ou can鈥檛 measure a parent鈥檚 hopefulness, you can鈥檛 measure a parent鈥檚 confidence,鈥 Moore said. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 measure a student鈥檚 competence based on the parent鈥檚 confidence.鈥
Patricia Spradley, the chief of parent and community engagement in the Springfield school district in Massachusetts, said it鈥檚 important for the superintendent to be on board with championing family engagement and for that work to be a formal part of a district鈥檚 strategic goals.
鈥淭hat allows a mechanism for enforcement,鈥 Spradley said, regarding how policymakers can approach supporting family engagement.
As for the potential for new funding sources, Spradley said: 鈥淔or those of us who have been the forerunners in the state of parent engagement, we are called upon to do training for others.
We have had very little professional-development opportunities to take this work to the next level that funding could help. At the local level, family engagement still feels like we are on our own, a bit of an afterthought, stand-alone part of the system that needs better integration.鈥