Introduction
Engaging parents substantively in their children’s literacy learning will be rewarding for both. The table below provides you with a few ideas to consider.Please complete the figure with your own ideas on how you cansubstantively engage parents in literacy learning appropriate for your standards-based content. Think about sharing this template with parents so they know how you will teach, what you expect, and how they will be asked to support literacy learning at home.
Engaging Parents in Literacy Learning | ||
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Expectations of Daily Practice | Idea | Your Own Ideas |
Print Rich | Ask parents to provide commentson student writing after being given the rubric. Post in the classroom. Ask parents to share their writingand post or contribute a favoriteread to the classroom library. | |
Literacy Processes | Ask students to preview a text with a family member. Ask students to interview a familymember regarding a concept beingstudied and write down responses. Ask students to read to a parent.The parent will summarize what thestudent reads. Reverse the roles. | |
Read to and With | Ask a family member to read a text with a student, with both completing a reflection. How do their reflections compareand contrast? Why do you suppose theirreflections are different? | |
Teach, Model, and Practice Strategies | Provide parents with questions to ask the student after the student has read the text assigned. Questions should relate toprediction, connections,visualization, evaluation, or othercomprehension strategies. | |
Accountable Independent Reading | Once a week, expect students to read for 20 minutes at home and a family member to note that the student completed the task, after the accountability is written. |
As a grade, team, or school, you may decide that each teacher will format a template that is specific to his or her class and share with parents. This type of systematic effort pays off in improvements in student achievement. Each of these ideas can be modified for the student to engage with any family member, either younger or older. Reading to a younger child enhancesconfidence and builds fluency, and is good literacy practice for both.
Taylor, R. (2007). Improving reading, writing and content learning for students in grades 4-12. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press.
Source
Improving Reading, Writing and Content Learning for Students in Grades 4-12