Every Teacher's Guide to Working With ParentsTransform teacher-parent relationships into a strategy for children's success! While most parents strive to support their children with the best parenting practices, both teachers and parents often find themselves struggling to reconcile conflicts that can result in hostility, defensiveness, and communication breakdowns. In addition, negative public constructions of parents perpetuate this dilemma, particularly for those parents who are already marginalized through poverty or language barriers. Working from research in three key areas-parent development and skills, social and historical family influences, and parent-school relationships-educator (and parent) Gwen L. Rudney offers teachers: Useful interpretations of parent beliefs and actions Compelling insight into what parents expect from teachers Key ideas that characterize the struggles that parents face while raising children Practical strategies designed to lead to community, trust-building, collaboration, gratitude, and friendship with parents Straightforward chapters offer teachers everything from theory to commonsense strategies for working with parents to improve life and learning for all children. |
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Page 5
Author Donna Corwin ( 1997 ) , for example , offers five categories of parenting . The fixer , the controller , and the avoider are styles that are self - explanatory . Style four is the modernist who focuses on psychology and therapy .
Author Donna Corwin ( 1997 ) , for example , offers five categories of parenting . The fixer , the controller , and the avoider are styles that are self - explanatory . Style four is the modernist who focuses on psychology and therapy .
Page 11
Consider , for example , a family whose members almost never spend time together versus families who spend almost all their time together , exclud- ing nearly every outside relationship and interest . That's a big example .
Consider , for example , a family whose members almost never spend time together versus families who spend almost all their time together , exclud- ing nearly every outside relationship and interest . That's a big example .
Page 68
This story is an example of a habit of mind that does not help us work well with families . It sends a negative message about parents - this time to a room full of future teachers - and it isn't true . Parents spend an average of more ...
This story is an example of a habit of mind that does not help us work well with families . It sends a negative message about parents - this time to a room full of future teachers - and it isn't true . Parents spend an average of more ...
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Contents
So Whats the Problem? | 8 |
The Kids Have a Role | 14 |
Helping Parents Who Have Special Struggles | 23 |
Copyright | |
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abuse adolescents adults advice advocacy advocate for families assumptions behaviors believe blended families chapter child abuse classroom collaboration communication conferences Coontz culture Deerfield Beach demands difficult Education encourage expectations experiences feel focus Friel Gahanna Galinsky Garbarino grade habits of mind hard homework ideas images important interest Jeffers kids learning lives look me/not Media Influences meet ment messages MetLife mothers National PTA negative nurture assumption nurturing parent involvement Parent traps parent-teacher parenting styles parents and families parents and teachers parents need Parents Remember person perspectives positive poverty problems profes professional raising children response Retrieved February Rudney share single parents skills Sometimes spheres of knowledge Stages of Parenthood struggle success suggests takes a village target goals teachers need Teen Pregnancy Theory Y things think parents Thousand Oaks trouble Umeå understand USA Weekend