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Wei, Feng; Ni, Yongmei – Educational Management Administration & Leadership, 2023
Parents are one of the most important factors promoting children's educational success. Using parent survey data from rural primary and middle schools in one county, this study examines the implementation of the parent councils (PCs) policy in rural China, specifically, the relationships among PCs, school-based parent involvement (PI), and parent…
Descriptors: Parent Participation, Parent Attitudes, Parent School Relationship, Rural Schools
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Álvarez-Álvarez, Carmen – Improving Schools, 2020
The involvement of families in Spanish schools is a legally recognised right, a social demand, an educational need and a permanent challenge. However, there are limited opportunities for families to become engaged with schools in Spain. Their primary avenues for involvement are Parents' Associations ("Asociaciones de Madres y Padres de…
Descriptors: Parent Participation, Foreign Countries, Parent Associations, Public Schools
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Chan, Tak Cheung; Shu, Zhiding; Xiao, Hong Ying – School Community Journal, 2021
Research has indicated that parents play a significant role in promoting school and family collaborative activities. However, empirical studies on parental engagement in school and family collaboration in China are scarce. This study investigates how Chinese parents perceived the school and family collaborative activities initiated by elementary…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, Family School Relationship, Parent Participation, Elementary Schools
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Nyatuka, Benard Omenge – Asian Journal of Education and Training, 2016
In order for children to acquire meaningful education, families are advised to participate in learning activities at home. Such activities range from monitoring homework, problem-solving to reading with children during leisure time. But home-learning was claimed to receive little attention from key stakeholders among primary schools in Kenya's…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Parents as Teachers, Family Environment, Parent Attitudes
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Martinez-Cosio, Maria – Education and Urban Society, 2010
This article presents an analysis of a Latino parent group and an African American parent group in California who struggled to engage with a contentious urban school reform. Using Bourdieu's cultural capital framework, the study focuses on the institutional responses to parent involvement, and the inequality in access that occurs as capital from…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, School Restructuring, Parent Participation, Parent School Relationship
Delp, Jeanne L.; Martinson, Ruth A. – 1974
The working draft of the handbook for parents of gifted and talented children provides information in characteristics of the gifted, educational neglect of the gifted, and parent role. Discussed are the importance of identifying the gifted and typical characteristics such as exceptional academic achievement, a wide range of interests, and…
Descriptors: Bibliographies, Creativity, Educational Needs, Exceptional Child Education
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Morris, Lynda – 1996
In a survey of 247 parents of gifted students in a pull-out program designed for academically gifted students in grades four through six in Midland, Texas, parents were asked how they participated in the program and how they viewed the importance of being involved in various aspects of their child's special education. Among the results, the survey…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Intermediate Grades, Parent Associations, Parent Attitudes
Wertheimer, Alison – 1989
A study examined the impact on parents when a young person with disabilities is involved in self-advocacy. Methodologies used included a literature review, interviews with nine families of young people with disabilities, collection of information about parent support initiatives, and discussion with a self-advocay group. During the course of the…
Descriptors: Adult Children, Disabilities, Foreign Countries, Fund Raising
Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, Washington, DC. – 1975
Title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (ESEA) supports programs in schools attended by significant numbers of children from low income families who, along with other students, may need this extra help to improve their performance. As a result of recent changes in the law, more parents will now be involved in the planning,…
Descriptors: Advisory Committees, Disadvantaged Youth, Educational Legislation, Federal Programs
Beattie, Nicholas – 1989
The paper examines parent involvement in the governance of schools. Five structures that incorporate elected parent representatives in consultative and decision-making committees established by law are discussed: (1) School Improvement Councils (Massachusetts); (2) Boards of Governors (England and Wales); (3) Counseils d'etablissement (France);…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Educational Development, Educational Improvement, Educational Quality
Coleman, James S. – 1988
Schools are more effective for students from strong family backgrounds than for those from weak ones as a result of the interaction between the resources devoted by the family to the child's education, and the resources provided by the school. The elements the family supplies towards the child's education must be developed through investment in…
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, Cross Cultural Studies, Dropout Rate, Elementary Secondary Education
Davies, Don – Equity and Choice, 1988
Interviews with 150 low-income parents in three countries reveal that their low involvement with the schools was due to the fact that teachers and administrators have a substandard view of low-socioeconomic status families, and the parents have low assessments of their own educational effectiveness. Empowerment programs in each country are…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Elementary Secondary Education, Empowerment, Family School Relationship