September 2007 Announcement
Dear FINE Member,
Welcome back from what we hope has been an inspiring summer break! As we kick
off the academic year, we are taking the opportunity to look forward, both for
FINE and for the family involvement field as a whole.
Over the next few months, the FINE project at Harvard Family Research Project
(HFRP) will continue our commitment to building the field of family and community
engagement. With an upcoming redesigned website, new resources, and a family
involvement framework that we hope will inspire fresh thinking, we are helping
the field to make new strides in policy, practice, and research. Stay tuned!
Here's a preview of what you can expect to see from us in the coming months
and an update on some recent and important family involvement resources.
Upcoming Resources From FINE & HFRP
- Updated Online Resource Guide
Responding to recent growth in the family involvement field, this fall
FINE will release an updated Taking a Closer Look: A Guide to Online
Resources on Family Involvement. Originally published in 2005, this
guide offers a one-stop shop with links to hundreds of research
resources, professional development opportunities, programs, and other tools
to support the development of knowledge, practice, and policy in family
and community engagement. You can access the 2005 edition of the guide at
the link above.
- HFRP's New Website
For the past year, we at Harvard Family Research Project have been hard
at work redesigning our website to make it more user friendly. With an expected
launch date in late fall, the site will feature new content and new search
and navigation functions to help you access our resources more easily.
As part of the website launch, we will be asking our FINE members to complete
a short survey to learn what it is that you find most useful about our resources
and how we might best support your work. We are committed to making FINE
a useful and vibrant forum for our members. Hearing from you is key to our
ability to deliver on that promise, so please keep an eye out for that online
survey later this fall!
- Complementary
Learning Professional Development Institute
On November 13, Harvard Family Research Project will cohost its
second professional development institute on complementary learning with
Programs in Professional Education (PPE) at the Harvard Graduate School
of Education. For more than 25 years, PPE has offered professional development
programs with the latest research, information, and best practices. This
institute, entitled Closing the Achievement Gap: Linking Families,
Schools, and Communities Through Complementary Learning, will explore
how schools, families, out-of-school time programs, and other organizations
and agencies can work together to build systems that promote childrens
learning and development. Registration is full, but you can still sign up
for the waitlist. To sign up for the waitlist or to register for other institutes,
call Programs in Professional Education at 1-800-545-1849 or go to the link
above.
- Evaluating Family Involvement
This coming winter, a double issue of HFRP's periodical, The Evaluation
Exchange, will focus on current and future directions for family involvement.
Leading experts in the field will discuss what it will take to build systematic
family involvement practices, policies, and research; explore the role of
research and evaluation in building the field; and present cutting-edge
research findings and evaluation approaches. The issue will feature HFRPs
family involvement framework, which highlights the importance of building
family involvement across ages and settings and with a basis in mutual responsibility.
You can access an archive of past Evaluation Exchange issues at the
link above.
New From FINE
- Tomasito's Mother Comes
to School/La mamá de Tomasito visita la escuela
Originally released in June, this online bilingual storybook about family
involvement at school includes a children's story, along with an informational
guide for adult family members and discussion questions. The story draws
from the real experiences of one Latino boy and his family who are acculturating
to the U.S. The storybook and related tools are designed to engage children,
inform and inspire their families, and help educators build connections
with families, all while supporting literacy.
- Family Involvement in
Middle and High School
Our most recent research brief, Family Involvement in Middle and High
School Students' Education, synthesizes studies that link family involvement
in middle and high school to youth's academic and social outcomes. The final
installment in a three-part series that shows that family involvement matters
from birth through adolescence, this brief profiles evaluated programs to
show what works to promote family involvement and student achievement in
adolescence and highlights how you can use this research to promote effective
policies and practices.
- Related Resources: Family
Involvement in Early Childhood and Elementary School
To read the other to briefs in the series, Family Involvement in Early
Childhood Education, and Family Involvement in Elementary School
Children's Education, visit the link above.
New From HFRP
- Highlights From the
Out-of-School Time Database
The newest Research Update synthesizes findings from the profiles
of 13 research and evaluation reports added to the Out-of-School Time Program
Research and Evaluation Database in August 2007. It highlights innovations
and developments in the out-of-school time field and looks at the benefits
that out-of-school time programs can provide to youth, their families, and
their communities.
- Related Resource: Out-of-School
Time Database
To access the many profiles of out-of-school time program evaluations
and research studies in our Out-of-School Time Database, including those
just added in August 2007, go to the link above.
- The
Quality of School-Age Child Care in After-School Settings
This brief, written by HFRPs Priscilla Little and published by Child
Care & Early Education Research Connections, offers an overview of the
features of high-quality after school settings, including an examination
of key research on links between program quality and developmental outcomes.
The brief also reviews current practice in program quality assessment, and
a set of quality-related considerations for policymakers.
Policy
- New Parental Information
and Resource Centers Website
Harvard Family Research Project is proud to be part of the National Coordination
Center for the Parental Information and Resource Centers (PIRC) in collaboration
with the Southwest Educational Development Laboratory (SEDL). The Coordination
Center provides technical assistance to the 62 federally funded PIRCs and
has recently launched a new website. Visit this link to learn more about
the PIRC program, to locate the PIRC in your state, and to learn about the
Coordination Centers plans for technical assistance to the PIRCs.
New resources will be added in the coming months.
- Engaging
Parents in Education
As part of its Innovation in Education series, the U.S. Department
of Education recently released Engaging Parents in Education: Lessons
from Five Parental Information and Resource Centers. This publication
highlights some of the PIRCs' best practices for building parents' understanding
of No Child Left Behind and for preparing educators and parents to collaborate
in support of student learning.
- Related
Resource: The Education Innovator
The feature article in the Department of Educations newsletter The
Education Innovator highlights the guide, the PIRCs, and the National
Coordination Center.
- Making
Pre-Kindergarten Work for Low-Income Working Families
This policy paper published by the Center for Law and Social Policy (CLASP)
synthesizes research conducted on 29 state prekindergarten policies that
include provisions for community-based care. The authors describe examples
of models and strategies states are using to provide prekindergarten to
their low-income working families, and offer recommendations for all state
policymakers to improve access to and the quality of prekindergarten programs.
Articles & Reports
- Chicago
ChildParent Centers Long-Term Benefits
This article presents the latest research findings from Arthur Reynolds
and his colleagues' randomized early childhood intervention in Chicago.
Investigating long-term effects at age 24, the authors found that those
who had participated in the holistic preschool program were more likely
to graduate from high school, attend college, and have health insurance,
and were less likely to have criminal records and depressive symptoms.
- Building,
Engaging, and Supporting Family and Parental Involvement in Out-of-School
Time Programs
This brief from Child Trends summarizes the research on outcomes and best
practices for family engagement in after school. It also offers suggestions
for programs to plan for and sustain family involvement, and spotlights
how the National Organization of Concerned Black Men has involved families
in out-of-school time.
- Related Resource:
Focus on Families! How to Build and Support Family-Centered Practices in
After School
This easy-to-read guidethe result of a collaboration between HFRP,
United Way of Massachusetts Bay, and BOSTnetis a critical resource
for any after school provider looking to create or expand a family engagement
program. It includes a research review of the benefits and challenges of
engaging families after school, suggested strategies, program examples,
an evaluation tool, and additional resources.
- The
Creative Bridge: How the Arts Connect Parents and Schools
In this article published in the national PTAs Our Children,
Michael Sikes synthesizes results from evaluations of arts education over
the past 15 years and suggests that arts can provide an opportunity for
parents to feel welcomed and linked into their childrens education.
Sikes also describes suggestions for how arts can be used to overcome common
barriers to family involvement.
- Related Resource:
Building Parent Involvement Through the Arts
In his new book, Building Parent Involvement Through the Arts, Michael
Sikes argues that parent involvement increases with arts education and that
this fact can be used as a leverage point in advocacy for arts programming
in schools. This book describes tools and strategies for using arts to build
and sustain partnerships with families.
Tool Kits
- Engaging
Parents in Raising Achievement
Warwick University has released new research findings on parent perceptions
of their importance and role in raising student achievement. Accompanying
this research report is an action tool kit that provides strategies for
effective parent involvement.
- Youth Outcomes Measurement
Tools Directory
United Way of Massachusetts Bay and Merrimack Valley have launched Toolfind.org.
Toolfind is a free directory designed to help professionals in youth-serving
programs find measurement tools for up to 11 youth outcome areas. All tools
are tested, low-cost and have few restrictions. Tools included in this database
address elementary, middle and/or high school students and youth, parent,
staff and teacher respondents.
Books
- City
Schools: How Districts and Communities Can Create Smart Education Systems
Annenberg Institute for School Reform scholar Robert Rothman and his colleagues
have published a new book that describes how school districts can get smarter
by connecting with nonschool support systems. Based on their research in
a number of districts and communities, the authors provide examples and
offer suggestions for how schools can build partnerships with families,
community agencies, businesses, and nonprofits to best support children
and youth. The book is available for purchase at the link above.
Upcoming Events
- Arizona
Fathers and Families Coalition Conference
September 2426, the AZFFC is hosting its annual Unifying Families
and Communities conference in Philadelphia, PA. This professional
development institute will have over 30 presentations about the importance
of fathers in child development. For more information, visit the link above.
- National
Network of Partnership Schools Leadership Development Conference
The National Network of Partnership Schools (NNPS) at Johns Hopkins University
will conduct its annual Leadership Development Conference on
school, family, and community partnerships on October 1112, 2007.
The NNPS conference brings together leaders from schools, districts, states,
and organizations that are developing research-based programs of family
and community involvement linked to school improvement goals for student
success. For more information, click on the link above or contact Mr. Kenyatta
Williams at kwilliams@csos.jhu.edu
Contact Us
If you experience a problem reading this newsletter or have questions and
comments concerning our work, we would love to hear from you. Please send an
email to fine@gse.harvard.edu.
Enjoy!
The FINE Team at Harvard Family Research Project
|