You may or may not know that I have another blog focusing on parent engagement resources. And I have scores of related “Best” lists here.
Over the past few years, though, I’ve just been sharing links to related resources there, and have used Storify to collect them.
Storify, however, announced this past week that they are closing down next May. So, I’m beginning to sort through those collections and move key resources to other platforms.
This list is my first attempt at this review. For now, I’m just collecting the most key links here and at some later date will add them to the appropriate “Best” lists.
I’ve previously published The Best Parent Engagement Resources 2017 and Part Two: The Best Parent Engagement Resources – 2017.
Part Two was really the Best of 2016 as I attempted to salvage Storify resources, but I thought it would be strange to title that post with that date as we enter 2018. And this list is really the best from 2015, and is my last one as I re-visit those Storify collections.
I’ll continue to collect parent engagement resources at my other blog. However, I’ll be using the TweetDeck “collections” feature for those future posts.
I’m adding this post to All 2017 “Best” Lists In One Place.
Here are my choices:
Thinking About Texting Parents? Best Practices for School-to-Parent Texting
Kitchen Table Connections (or 5 Ideas to Re-Envision Homework)
Parent Engagement: Crucial Element of Successful Schools
Why You Shouldn’t Pay Children for Grades
Listening and Learning from Families: What Schools Can Do to Really Strengthen Family Engagement
What If Teachers Regularly Communicated With Parents?
The barriers keeping immigrant parents from getting involved in their kids’ education
Why it’s a school’s problem when a parent doesn’t speak English
Tips for Connecting With Non-English-Speaking Parents https://t.co/J6W7QOC8so via @education week @larryferlazzo
— Anabel Gonzalez (@amgonza) December 2, 2015
Thoughtful, (painfully) honest piece by @nancyflanagan about how teachers see parents https://t.co/LC7BzhdWC4
— Matt Barnum (@matt_barnum) October 29, 2015
"We are moving from thinking of parents as the problem to parents as partners." https://t.co/q9dTNXaKEr pic.twitter.com/Gm6BgfnFYo
— Education Week (@educationweek) November 2, 2015
BLOGGED: Why Parent Involvement Matters: The Research http://t.co/6pYegJxLKp #education
— Vicki Davis (@coolcatteacher) October 16, 2015
A home visit program is taking flight in St Paul schools. @nfabe tells the story in American Educator @SPFT28 @PTHVP http://t.co/gwmrGpG92I
— Amy Hightower (@ahtower) October 1, 2015
Today, I called parent of child who has turned things around. She told me,"Thank you! You, "Juan" & I are a team!"
— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) October 2, 2015
Following up on @npr_ed story, @blogsbe reflects on challenges and upsides of teacher home visits http://t.co/imuP3W0WY0 cc @larryferlazzo
— Alexander (@alexanderrusso) October 2, 2015
Home visiting linked to lower school truancy and better reading outcomes http://t.co/uVjlNu3OaV
— Post Education (@PostSchools) October 2, 2015
Calls home to parents should be for positive reasons, coach David Ginsberg says. http://t.co/lTN0tgApDl pic.twitter.com/zpccfWzqoY
— EdWeek Teacher (@EdWeekTeacher) September 1, 2015
It's not how involved a parent is w/ kids' educ, but HOW (& why) a parent is involved. Study shows effects differ: http://t.co/YNjZy9e7rx
— Alfie Kohn (@alfiekohn) August 14, 2015
NEW: All my @EdWeekTeacher posts from past 4 yrs on parent engagement – in one place! http://t.co/PWm01XOS9I pic.twitter.com/XVUFuqoQkT
— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) August 8, 2015
Community engagement is building and sharing power, not displaying power. – @mcricker #unite4ed
— AFT (@AFTunion) July 23, 2015
@Larryferlazzo got a shoutout in call for further research on parent inv & generativity: http://t.co/p1Mx9YRSoR
— Lori G. Thomas (@LoriT027) July 10, 2015
Check out the new family engagement policy brief from @NCSLeducation :http://t.co/VLl0FvfDGq
— NCSL Education (@NCSLeducation) July 6, 2015
Brand new issue of School Community Journal is now posted at http://t.co/xXALeU5wKa #ptchat #openaccess
— Lori G. Thomas (@LoriT027) July 2, 2015
Conversation "vastly more important" than # of words a child is exposed to, researcher says about early vocab gap. http://t.co/SkZiWpQXut
— Lesli Maxwell (@l_maxwell) April 24, 2015
“It’s no longer enough to focus #family engagement solely on what happens in school.” http://t.co/pVEq3HzH0q
— Usable Knowledge (@UKnowHGSE) May 4, 2015
Do poor kids hear 30 million words less than rich kids? A myth? http://t.co/xUQyC3QkxG thanks to @ThinkReadTweet
— Martin Robinson (@Trivium21c) May 24, 2015
When parents stay involved in their teenager's education, teens do better academically and emotionally https://t.co/itQrxaBRVb #parenting
— Usable Knowledge (@UKnowHGSE) May 26, 2015
RT @hgse: "Parent Engagement on Rise as Priority for Schools, Districts" featuring @Karen_Mapp & @HFRP http://t.co/dt1zwS5PR6 #ptchat
— GlobalFamilyResProj (@GlobalFRP) June 9, 2015
Not ever a fan of deficit characterizations of parents, but this report offers strong and important recommendations:http://t.co/p5XvPh7RmD
— Karen Mapp (@karen_mapp) June 14, 2015
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