Join the conversation

...about what is working in our public schools.

Building Community Trust in Urban Schools is Hard Work

Larry_Ferlazzo's picture

Editor's note: Over the few days, we have published guest postings by Renee Moore and Larry Ferlazzo on how teachers view parent engagement in public schools. Today, Larry responds to Renee's posting. 

Renee’s point about how teachers are intimately involved with parents on a day-to-day basis outside of school in her rural area is a good one. In many (if not most?) urban schools, teachers never see parents (or their students) in a non-school situation since most of us don’t live in the same communities where we teach.

I’d say that rural-urban difference emphasizes the particular need for urban schools to embrace home-visiting by teachers and/or other types of “engagement” efforts. The personal trust that parents have for Renee and her colleagues in their rural community, I think, is less likely to occur in areas without that kind of personal contact.

I was told once about a supposedly old Chinese saying – “A person has to stand with their mouth open for a long time before a roast duck is going to fly into it.” The level of trust Renee describes has to be developed. It won’t happen “magically,” especially when many parents of our students might not have had a positive experience in their own school life.

At another urban school where I did my student-teaching, I would hear some teachers use, as Renee writes, the “lack of parental involvement…as an excuse for low-expectations.” I would also hear some of these same teachers say that one of the reasons they liked teaching at the school was because they didn’t have to “deal with parents” (without any indication that they saw a contradiction in their statements).

I would like to think, though, that in most instances it’s not a matter of “good” teachers wanting to make those kinds of trusting connections to children and to their families, and “lazy” teachers not wanting to do so. Instead, I think the responsibility lies on those of us who believe parent engagement is important to help other teachers see that it is in their own self-interest to make those kinds of connections and that it will help them achieve their own goals to do so.

By first making those kinds of trusting connections with our colleagues, and learning their hopes and dreams, we can take the first steps towards helping them see that they might be able to reach them by connecting in a different way with their students and their families.

 


Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.

More information about formatting options


CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

Sign up

Sign up for our e-newsletter on public school success.

Get our daily email feed. Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Link to Public School Insights Facebook Page
Become a Facebook fan.

H1N1 FLU RESOURCES

Click here for resources to help the public education community prepare for the unlikely case of a flu pandemic.

Emerging Vision

On this website, educators, parents and policymakers from coast to coast are sharing what's already working in public schools--and sparking a national conversation about how to make it work for children in every school. Join the conversation! Learn more.

Visionaries

Click here to browse dozens of Public School Insights interviews with extraordinary education advocates, including: 

  • Best-Selling Author Dan Pink
  • Teacher Educator Nancy Bacharach
  • Technology and Design Legend David Kelley
  • Aldine Superintendent Wanda Bamberg
  • American Productivity and Quality Center Chairman Jack Grayson
  • Washingon Principal Sharon Collins
  • New Stories

    Featured Story

    Davenport

    A Village Route to Early Childhood Education

    In the 1990s, we at Davenport Community Schools noticed a trend: Children were coming to kindergarten unprepared to learn. A troublingly low number of our district’s children (more than half of whom receive free or reduced price lunch) had preschool experience. Recognizing the importance of early childhood education in ensuring students are ready to succeed in school and life, we developed the Children’s Village, which includes formal preschool classes and all-day, year-round programming serving children from six weeks to five years old.  Today, when a Children’s Village student arrives for the first day of kindergarten, the teacher can say, “This child is ready to learn.”

    With early childhood education, students learn more, teachers accomplish more and taxpayers get more for their education tax dollar. But it takes all our students, teachers, staff, administrators, parents and partners to make the Children’s Villages a success. Indeed, it really does take a village to ensure quality early childhood education. Read more

    School/District Characteristics

    Hot Topics

    Blog Roll