United Way
13
An online collection of education, income and health news by and for United Ways and their community partners
Curated by LynnॐT
Follow
Scooped by LynnॐT onto United Way
Scoop.it!

The Power of Academic Parent-Teacher Teams

The Power of Academic Parent-Teacher Teams | United Way | Scoop.it

This time of year, many people are reflecting on what is truly important in life and all they have to be grateful for. The most common item of the top of these lists: family.

By Ann O'Brien

 

This time of year, many people are reflecting on what is truly important in life and all they have to be grateful for. The most common item of the top of these lists: family.

Many successful individuals can point to family as a factor in that success -- perhaps because of their unwavering belief in our abilities, perhaps because they pushed us beyond what we thought we were capable of, perhaps for their financial contributions to our education. But the overarching feeling is, because of their support.

 

For those of us fortunate enough to be born into families that knew how to best support us, particularly in our academic endeavors, this support almost goes without saying. But in some families, parents who would like to help their children succeed don't know how best to do so. As educators, we can help families develop the skills needed to support their children in school and beyond. One model for doing so: Academic Parent-Teacher Teams (1) (APTT).

Academic Parent-Teacher Teams

In the mid-2000s, Dr. Maria C. Paredes (2) was Director of Community Education in Phoenix's Creighton Elementary School District and a doctoral student at Arizona State University. Responsible for creating family engagement opportunities, she set up parent workshops, hired parent liaisons and more. One major accomplishment: Repurposing the district's parent-teacher conferences, which she found "mostly ineffective, lack[ing] strategy, ... void of relevant academic substance, and ... without accountability for parents and teachers."

 

As her doctoral action research project, she developed the APTT model, in which teachers coach parents to become engaged, knowledgeable members of the academic team. In other words, teachers help build parental capacity, developing parental understanding of their children's grade-level learning goals and how to help them meet or exceed standards.

The Model

APTT has two main components. The first is three classroom team meetings each year. The "classroom team" consists of the classroom teacher and all the parents in the class. In these group meetings, the teacher reviews and explains class-level academic data, in addition to providing parents with individual data about their own child's performance and helping parents set 60-day SMART (Specific, Measurable, Actionable, Realistic, and Time-Bound) academic goals for their children. She or he also models and provides materials for activities that parents can do with their children at home, giving parents time to practice these activities with each other in a small group setting. In addition, parents can share tips among themselves. (See what these look like in action (3) -- the video is long but worth it to get a sense of the type of material covered as well as the level of comfort that parents have with teachers.)

 

The model also includes one thirty-minute in-depth individual conference between the teacher, a student and his or her family each year. At these meetings, they review performance data, create an action plan for continuous improvement, discuss how to support student learning at home, and develop stronger relationships. Additional individual conferences are scheduled as needed.

The Impact

This model appears very promising. Student achievement in both math and reading is up for students whose families have access to APTT compared to students whose families do not. The program also seems to increase student engagement, confidence and attendance, as well as improve parent-teacher communication and parent self-efficacy for supporting student learning at home. Some principals report that the model promotes a sense of community within the school that decreases discipline problems among students and that parents are more comfortable reaching out to other families to resolve conflicts. As Paredes says, "Strangers have become partners in purpose."

 

Perhaps one of the best ways to assess the perceived impact of the program is to look at teacher participation. The program started with just nine participating teachers in the Creighton School District. The next year, 79 teachers joined the program. In the third year, 187 participated. Now in year four, about 218 classrooms in Creighton are participating. And the model (which Paredes has copyrighted) has spread across the nation -- it is now reaching about 28,000 students in five states and the District of Columbia.

 

According to Paredes, one of the greatest challenges implementing this (or any model of family engagement) is some educators' mindset about families. As she says, "We often doubt families' capacity to help their children, and we often have mistaken perceptions of their ability to commit to higher expectations and standards for learning," particularly for the families of disadvantaged and minority children.

 

This season, as we reflect on the support we've received from our own families, we should remember that all individuals desire the opportunity to provide that support to their children. And we should take advantage of our position as educators to help them do so. While not every school or teacher can participate in something like APTT, we can all take steps to build the capacity of families to help their children succeed.

No comment yet.
LynnॐT is also curating
Social Media for Noobs Tales for a Modern Day Content Management for Noobs Uppity Thinking
Discover Topics LynnॐT is following
Content Curation World Metro United Way in the News
Your new post is loading...
Scooped by LynnॐT
Scoop.it!

Hospitals and Community Organizing: Q&A with Robert Kahn

Hospitals and Community Organizing: Q&A with Robert Kahn | United Way | Scoop.it

Hospitals interested in providing more than clinical services see the value of connecting with United Ways to go “upstream.” United Ways can assist their hospital partners with addressing the social determinants of health—housing, employment, income and education—in a comprehensive way. The work of the Community Health Initiative at the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center and their relationship with United Way of Greater Cincinnati is just one example.

 

Hospitals and Community Organizing: Q&A with Robert Kahn Robert Kahn, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center (photo courtesy of the hospital)

 

The Community Health Initiative (CHI), a program of the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center in Ohio, includes work with nontraditional community partners to support community organizing and address critical children’s health issues in the community. For example, using geocoding technology to identify areas of greatest need—“hotspots”—by mapping clusters of readmitted asthma patients to substandard housing units owned by the same landlord. CHI partnered with the Legal Aid Society of Greater Cincinnati, which helped tenants form an association and compel the property owner to make repairs. CHI also makes referrals to Legal Aid for patients who need help with Medicaid benefits or require other legal assistance. CHI has developed specific health metrics with which it evaluates the effectiveness of its programs and shares these data with local community organizations and CHI’s community partners.

 

The CHI work was featured in a new community benefit issue brief from The Hilltop Institute at UMBC, “Community Building and the Root Causes of Poor Health.”

 

NewPublicHealth recently spoke with Robert Kahn, MD, MPH, who is the Director of Research in the Division of General and Community Pediatrics at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital.

 

NewPublicHealth: What are the goals of the Community Health Initiative?

 

Robert Kahn: The Cincinnati Children's Hospital board established in its strategic plan for 2015 four goals that relate to the health of all 190,000 children in our county. The goals relate to:  infant mortality, unintentional injuries, asthma, and obesity rates as they relate to hospital readmissions. Our plan is to build a strategy and an infrastructure to cover the ground between a more traditional clinical approach and a truly public and social wellbeing approach to these conditions.

 

NPH: Why are partners so critical?

 

 

Robert Kahn: The hospital realized it can't possibly do this on its own. We need community collaborators to work with. The strategy we've taken is to think about how quality improvement approaches that we've used internally, say, to reduce central line infections, could be applied in a more public health kind of a way. So, how can we pick a small geographic area, think about rates of asthma or unintentional injury in that geographic area, begin to identify partners who would like to work on it with us, develop a shared understanding of the need and the drivers of the problem, and then begin to try to move at least the intermediate measures and eventually the final outcome measures.

 

NPH: Using unintentional injury as an example, how did the collaborations happen?

 

Robert Kahn: The hospital’s head of trauma surgery is leading our unintentional injury initiative. He used hospital discharge data to find the rates of unintentional injury between ages 1 and 4 in over 90 neighborhoods. Using one neighborhood, Norwood, as an example, he sat down with the mayor, the head of the fire department, EMS, and the public health department to begin thinking collectively about what we could do. They tried a few strategies that didn't work to get into homes to install safety equipment, and now they’ve shifted to community-wide safety days to attract parent attention and interest.

 

They’ve had two safety days in which they’ve gotten tremendous numbers of volunteers and they've actually installed safety equipment in about 20 percent of all the homes in that community with children under age 5, with equipment such as smoke alarms and safety gates. But the hospital soon realized that we can't be in the business of doing this in every community ourselves. Now we’re looking at how we can develop a cadre of community leaders so that it can eventually be scalable to other neighborhoods. And we are able to share with communities the rates of unintentional injuries in children in their community, because we take care of 90 percent of the emergency room visits and hospitalizations for kids in the county. So, essentially we are a population-based provider and can almost take on a more public health frame because we have all that discharge data.

 

NPH: How do you crystalize the hospital’s role in community organizing?

 

Robert Kahn: I see our role as bringing the health data and our strength in methodology to the community, and in some sense helping be a catalyst or an instigator for creating change on the ground. For the actual organizing, I would much rather find an existing child health consortium on the ground. A community has to own this in the long run for it to be sustainable.

 

NPH: Who are the partners that are so critical to get perspective beyond health care?

 

Robert Kahn: I think the goal, from my standpoint, is to get upstream of the health problems and actually think about the social determinants of health and help address issues like housing, employment, income and education. As we think about that, we've tried to consciously identify who are the very high leverage organizations that can help county-wide, as well as local organizations that can do more of the grassroots work. We're really trying to develop collaboration, for example, with the United Way of Greater Cincinnati. They have bold education and income goals and increasingly are developing bold health goals. So, how can we partner with an organization like United Way that distributes funding to agencies in the community, and use that as a high leverage point for action. Similarly, the Cincinnati public schools play a pivotal role in the lives of tens of thousands of children. How can we work at the highest levels with them as well to develop an agenda around good nutrition and physical activity?

 

NPH: Tell us about the asthma hot spotting project.

 

Robert Kahn: With the hospital discharge data for asthma, we can look at uncontrolled asthma practically in real-time, and then geocode those events to neighborhoods. We have maps now of the counties where we know where the asthma hotspots are, for example. We can give feedback on a monthly basis to see if things are changing. That drives a sense of urgency for us and also hopefully for the community partners to create change as quickly as possible, or to create improvements as quickly as possible.

 

NPH: And what is an example of an innovative partnership the hospital engaged in to tackle issues that span beyond clinical care?

 

Robert Kahn: An absolutely amazing collaboration is one between physicians taking care of low income kids and lawyers committed to low income families through the Legal Aid Society of Greater Cincinnati. We've built a partnership in which there's a legal advocate in our clinic five days a week. We now send over 700 referrals a year to the legal aid advocate. In that clinic, we have 15,000 children and over 35,000 visits a year and physicians ask about housing conditions, but this partnership with legal aid has uncovered really important patterns. Three separate physicians referred a family to legal aid where the family reported that the landlord told them, in the heat of summer, that they'd be evicted if they put in a portable air conditioner into the unit.

 

Legal aid asked the simple question that a physician never would have asked—who's your landlord? They discovered there was a single developer who owned 19 buildings in Cincinnati who had gone into foreclosure, and all 19 buildings, with over 600 units, were falling into disrepair. They went in and formed tenant associations, worked with Fannie Mae and the property management company for the buildings to institute systemic repairs in about eleven of the buildings including new roofs, cooling and heating. By physicians working hand in glove with a great organization like legal aid, whose mission is stabilizing housing, stabilizing income, we together achieved sort the broader aim of addressing social determinants.

 

>>Read a brand new study published in Pediatrics describing the outcomes of this medical-legal partnership.

 

NPH: Have you seen any progress so far, on any of these issues?

 

Robert Kahn: That's always the hard question. We think we're beginning to see a signal, especially with the injury work in Norwood. It's very early and we still have a lot of mistakes to make and learn from. For asthma, there's a team that's been working on the issue for a while, and we see a reduction in readmissions among children on Medicaid. And they've done that by trying to move more of the care out into the communities, such as a home health program where they're working on self-management of asthma in the home, as well as home delivery of asthma medication to improve adherence.

 

One of the huge wins for me was when I saw some of the hospitals' approach to goal setting and data-informed approaches appearing in grants that community organizations are submitting, independent of us. They’ve now put in a couple of grants to support their own neighborhood work where they’ve asked to borrow our key driver diagram or asked us to suggest quality improvement approaches. They’re finding value in what we’ve offered to put into proposals of their own, which creates a more sustainable model for change.

No comment yet.
Scooped by LynnॐT
Scoop.it!

Lawrence task force targets underage drinking this semester

Lawrence task force targets underage drinking this semester | United Way | Scoop.it

The Lawrence Police Department is just one entity trying to prevent underage drinking. Lawrence police, along with the KU Public Safety Office, the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office and Kansas Division of Alcoholic Beverage Control are all part of the Fake ID 101 task force, which will target any area where alcohol may be consumed this semester.

 

Captain Mark Witt, a KU Public Safety Office coordinator for the task force, said students may be eligible for a diversion on their first alcohol violation in Kansas, but second offenses will stay on their record.

 

“It can follow you into your career,” Witt said. “We want students leaving with degrees, not criminal records.”

No comment yet.
Scooped by LynnॐT
Scoop.it!

Cutting through the hype: What "collaboration" really means

Cutting through the hype:  What "collaboration" really means | United Way | Scoop.it

Collaboration is an over-hyped term in the social software world. We offer a simple definition that makes sense and is useful.

 

By Ephraim Freed 

 

 

"We often think of collaboration as this big thing that the whole organization has to get better at, but collaboration is really something that happens on a smaller scale, within teams with clear and often narrow foci.

 

To improve collaboration you’ve got to help all your teams get better at collaboration, help all your managers improve their facilitation of collaboration, and help employees learn to operate in a collaborative mode. Improving collaboration is a specific domain and requires the use of social software tools in targeted ways."

No comment yet.
Scooped by LynnॐT
Scoop.it!

The Impact Video -- United Way of Treasure Valley

Take a look at how United Way of Treasure Valley is using collaboration to better engage and mobilize the community -- and to increase its impact.
No comment yet.
Scooped by LynnॐT
Scoop.it!

Foundation Center - Nonprofit Collaboration Database

The Foundation Center's database is a resource for everyone seeking real-life examples of how nonprofits are working together. Find information from more than 650 nonprofit collaborations drawn from the 2011 and 2009 Collaboration Prizes, created by the Lodestar Foundation.

No comment yet.
Scooped by LynnॐT
Scoop.it!

Creating The Village It Takes To Do Coalition Work

Creating The Village It Takes To Do Coalition Work | United Way | Scoop.it
Note From Beth: One of the principles in my book, The Networked Nonprofit, was that networked nonprofits consider people and organizations as part of their networks to make change.
No comment yet.
Scooped by LynnॐT
Scoop.it!

Ryerson Long aiming for ‘Ready by 21’ plan - United Way of Bradley County’s Matt Ryerson and Patrick Long are joining leaders from four other Tennessee communities today to begin discussing buildin...

Ryerson Long aiming for ‘Ready by 21’ plan - United Way of Bradley County’s Matt Ryerson and Patrick Long are joining leaders from four other Tennessee communities today to begin discussing buildin... | United Way | Scoop.it
Ryerson Long aiming for ‘Ready by 21’ plan - United Way of Bradley County’s Matt Ryerson and Patrick Long are joining leaders from four other Tennessee communities today to begin discussing building new ways to get their young people “Ready by 21”...
No comment yet.
Scooped by LynnॐT
Scoop.it!

10 Ways to Build Better Partnerships; Priority Schools Campaign

10 Ways to Build Better Partnerships; Priority Schools Campaign | United Way | Scoop.it

Establishing meaningful family- school-community partnerships is one of the most difficult challenges educators in priority schools face. Here are 10 key strategies to help get started and get past the hurdles to better help our students succeed.

 

Resource:   Family-School-Community Partnerships 2.0: Collaborative Strategies to Advance Student Learning - http://neapriorityschools.org/engaged-families-and-communities/family-school-community-partnerships-2-0-collaborative-strategies-to-advance-student-learning

No comment yet.
Scooped by LynnॐT
Scoop.it!

Development group awarded $150,000 to develop 200x2020 workforce development collaborative

Development group awarded $150,000 to develop 200x2020 workforce development collaborative | United Way | Scoop.it
Belknap CountyThe Community Development Finance Authority Tax Credit Program has awarded $150,000 in tax credits to the Belknap County Economic Development Council toward the 200x2020 workforce development collaborative.The 200x2020 initiative is ...
No comment yet.
Scooped by LynnॐT
Scoop.it!

Personal Attention Reduces Poverty (SSIR)

Personal Attention Reduces Poverty (SSIR) | United Way | Scoop.it

Circles, a national program for helping families get out of poverty, taps an underused resource: middle-class support groups...Gains made by families are laudable, given that most people have been stuck in poverty through two or three generations. About 64 percent of the nearly 1,200 participants finish the 15-week Getting Ahead class, and their income increased an average of 28 percent during that time. The longer they stay in the group, the more their income rises.

No comment yet.
Scooped by LynnॐT
Scoop.it!

Philanthropy Front and Center-Atlanta: Funding Collaboration: 10 Tips on Collaborative Grantseeking

Philanthropy Front and Center-Atlanta: Funding Collaboration: 10 Tips on Collaborative Grantseeking | United Way | Scoop.it
Collaboration is an innovative and efficient way for organizations to realize a common goal with another nonprofit, and tackle it together. One subject in particular...
No comment yet.