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Mackosha Arsharae Sparkman – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Parental involvement in student education is essential to students' academic success. Research has shown] that when parents are actively involved in their children's education, the children have higher academic achievement. However, the problem is that parents are not involved in the education of their children and that teachers do not have…
Descriptors: Parent Participation, Academic Achievement, Elementary School Teachers, Parent Teacher Cooperation
Rose Sebastian; Anandita Krishnamachari; Andrew McCartney – Journal of Education for Teaching: International Research and Pedagogy, 2024
Consultation evenings, also known as parent-teacher conferences, are important opportunities for teachers to strengthen their relationships with caregivers. Many teachers, however, are unprepared, having had few opportunities to build skills and participate in real consultations during teacher training. To provide student teachers with more…
Descriptors: Student Teachers, Parent Teacher Conferences, Simulation, Behavior Patterns
Liat Biberman-Shalev; Nurit Chamo; Shely Naar; Yitzchak Gilat – Early Child Development and Care, 2024
The article discusses the role of the different forms of capital within the patterns of relationships between kindergarten teachers (KTs) and parents in kindergartens located in one medium-high socioeconomic status neighborhood in Israel. The qualitative analysis conducted reveals how the parents' cultural capital serves as a resource to advance…
Descriptors: Parent Teacher Cooperation, Kindergarten, Preschool Teachers, Cultural Capital
Zamira Hyseni Duraku; Genta Jahiu; Donjeta Geci – International Journal of Educational Reform, 2025
This study aimed at identifying the interplay between individual and organizational factors and predictors of work motivation, job satisfaction, and burnout. This was a cross-sectional study, conducted with 460 early education teachers in Kosovo. Based on the results, job satisfaction and professional development are significant positive…
Descriptors: Individual Characteristics, Early Childhood Teachers, Job Satisfaction, Faculty Development
Orna Huri; Avihu Shoshana – Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 2025
The study's primary research question is how teachers whose inclusive classes include children with disabilities experienced the most recent amendment (2018) to Israel's Special Education Law. Interviews with 20 teachers revealed four key findings: a sense of professional isolation when having to cope with the challenges of having students with…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Attitudes, Students with Disabilities, Educational Legislation
Paulick, Judy; Kibler, Amanda K.; Palacios, Natalia – Reading Teacher, 2023
Children from Latinx families bring rich and varied literacy practices and cultural models to their classrooms. When teachers are able to recognize these assets, they have opportunities to make their teaching more responsive and engaging. One way to learn about these assets is through relationship-building, assets-framed home visits. In this…
Descriptors: Hispanic Americans, Hispanic American Culture, Family Literacy, Culturally Relevant Education
O'Grady, Courtney E.; Jackle, Erin M.; Ostrosky, Michaelene M. – Young Exceptional Children, 2023
Many early educators struggle with how to address challenging behaviors that they feel are persistent, and in fact, challenging behavior is identified as teachers' most pressing training need. Feeling unprepared to prevent and intervene on challenging behavior can lead to increased teacher stress, burnout, and turnover. In the most extreme…
Descriptors: Suspension, Early Childhood Education, Student Behavior, Preschool Children
Washington, Julie A.; Laramore, Gennie R. – American Educator, 2023
Reading is arguably the most important skill that children learn in school--and yet many children struggle to become strong readers. This is especially true of African American children. Children growing up in low-income, under-resourced neighborhoods often struggle with reading. But even among Black children in wealthier neighborhoods, learning…
Descriptors: African Americans, Children, Parent Participation, Language Usage
Naseema Shaik – Perspectives in Education, 2023
Parent participation is fundamental to children's early literacy development and later academic success. This small-scale qualitative study located in the interpretivist paradigm utilised semistructured interviews to collect data from two Grade R teachers' concerning their perceptions of parent participation in children's early literacy…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Kindergarten, Emergent Literacy, Parent Participation
Darragh, Lisa; Franke, Nike – International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2022
During the COVID-19 pandemic, many parents suddenly had to assume responsibility for their children's learning at home. Research conducted before the pandemic showed that mathematics homework is often unsuccessful or stressful for both parents and children and that tension exists between home and school in the learning of mathematics.…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, Distance Education, COVID-19, Pandemics
Mirjam Stroetinga; Yvonne Leeman; Wiel Veugelers – Education 3-13, 2024
This study focuses on how professionals in primary education contribute to children's upbringing, and engage in upbringing-related collaboration with parents. Eleven Dutch principals are interviewed about views, practices, and leadership. All of them recognise upbringing in education, and describe interwovenness of care, teaching and upbringing.…
Descriptors: Elementary Schools, Principals, Parent School Relationship, Administrator Attitudes
Ashwini Tiwari – Support for Learning, 2024
This descriptive case study examines the perspectives, beliefs and practices of independent private schoolteachers in India about the inclusion of students with special educational needs in general education classrooms. Data were collected through one-to-one interviews and focus group discussions with 10 teachers in an independent private school…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Private Schools, Teacher Attitudes, Students with Disabilities
Cristina Santamaría Graff; Melissa Ballesteros – Journal of Transformative Education, 2024
This qualitative study examined preservice special education teachers' (PSETs) movement toward critical consciousness and humility in working with families of children with disabilities using a Freirean lens grounded in three phases of consciousness: intransitive, transitive, and critical consciousness. The authors expanded upon a Family as…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Special Education Teachers, Parent Teacher Cooperation, Family Involvement
Tuba Gökmenoglu; Elif Dasci Sönmez; Ceyda Durmus – Issues in Educational Research, 2024
This study employed an explanatory sequential design and mixed methods to investigate school principals' perspectives on parent-teacher associations (PTAs). The research involved a large sample of 3,606 school principals or senior managers who participated in a survey and a smaller subsample of 6 principals who engaged in a focus group interview…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Principals, Administrator Attitudes, Parent Teacher Cooperation
Irina Malinina – Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 2024
As schools in Russia become more inclusive for students with special educational needs (SEN), there is a scarcity of research on stakeholders' perspectives. Parents are one of the main actors in education, who possess valuable knowledge about their children and can represent their children's needs in a vicarious manner. This study gives voice to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Parents, Parent Attitudes, Inclusion