Leadership magazine Sept/Oct 2014 V 44 No 1 | Page 13

showed 57 percent of parents with children in public schools were not yet aware of the new LCFF. While this percentage has certainly improved – thanks to outreach efforts by school leaders, PTAs and other community groups – it’s still a major call to action. For LCFF to succeed, all parents should be aware of the new law and the importance of participating in the LCAP. In March, PTA partnered with Education Trust West on a more detailed survey of our members. This research further showed that once parents learned more about the LCFF and LCAP, their support increased for its stated objectives, and – significantly – they indicated a greater willingness to be part of the process. We are careful to remind all education stakeholders and the public that simply adding a new requirement in state law for more parent engagement is not enough. We can’t simply pull a switch and cause greater levels of engagement. It takes hard work – and that work starts with getting the word out to make all parents aware of the new opportunity and the importance of the LCFF and LCAP. Family engagement is an investment There are no shortcuts to raising student achievement or to building successful parent engagement. Each takes an investment of time and resources and ongoing commitment by school districts, educators, parents and community partners working together. Authentic engagement is much more than a one-time check-box on a form. It’s about building a culture at every school where parents and family members feel welcomed, respected and appreciated – a culture where information is freely shared, and input is sought and genuinely considered. Remember, too, that investments in parent engagement are highly cost effective. Creating parent resource centers, hiring parent liaisons, providing interpreters and translation, offering parent leadership training such as through PTA’s School Smarts parent engagement program – most of these activities cost very little and make a huge positive impact. Many school districts are already doing excellent work to engage parents. For instance, Pomona Unified School District in Los Angeles County took a model approach to engaging parents and community members by hosting a mix of traditional stakeholder educational workshops as well as sessions where school administrators, district staff, principals and teachers learned alongside parents about the new LCFF and LCAP. Pomona USD partnered with the state and council PTA to engage more than 70 parent leaders in “learning conversations” that focused on understanding the effectiveness of existing district programs, understanding the LCAP through different issue lenses such as student health and achievement and arts education, and most of all, focusing on the power of relationships and understanding each other’s roles through open dialogue and feedback. Many districts have similarly held dozens of meetings, shared information in multiple languages at school sites across the district, promoted multiple ways for parents to engage, and been responsive to parent and community input in their initial plans. But there is also much more that all districts can do to make this the standard of practice across the state. Parent and family engagement is local A vital premise of the new LCFF is that decisions affecting student success are best made by those closest to the classroom. The PTA National Standards for Family-School Partnerships Assessment Guide (see sidebar, page 14) provides an excellent, research- Parent and family engagement for student success starts at home E ngaged parents make a difference in ensuring that their children enjoy overall success in school. More than 30 years of research indicates as much. It tells us that students with involved parents are more likely to attend school regularly, perform better in school, earn higher grades, pass their classes, develop better social skills and go on to post-secondary education. This successful strategy is based on a shared understanding in the school community that parents are a child’s first teachers and key resources in their child’s education and growth. As important stakeholders, engaged parents are involved in all aspects of their child’s education. Whether it’s reading together, monitoring homework at the kitchen table, talking to teachers about their child’s progress or taking an active part in school governance and decision-making, parents make a difference. Administrators play a lead role in making information, training and support available to all parents to help them support their children at home. based framework to guide every school district’s LCAP. We recommend that every plan seek to address each of the standards and that the various indicators help all stakeholders in the district to better understand the standards. What is the best way to measure progress toward the standards? In the spirit of local control, we encourage that question to be part of every district’s conversation around the LCAP. As part of local plans, each district, with parent input, should determine how it will build stronger family-school partnerships and measure progress toward each of the standards and indicators based on the priorities and needs of its community. The success of collaborative efforts often hinges on how early discussions begin among parents and school leaders. The ear- September/October 2014 13