Differences in Pre-Service Teacher Attitude Change about Family Involvement across Four Universities
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Across all four universities, what was the effect of PTEC participation on pre-service teacher attitudes towards family involvement when looking at changes in individual item scores on the ATPIS?
- How did the differences in implementation of the curriculum at the four universities relate to pre-service teacher attitude change in ways that can inform teacher education practice as suggested by changes in individual item scores on the ATPIS?
2. Background of the Study
Teacher’s Role in Family Involvement
3. Current Status of Teacher Training on Parent Involvement
4. Deficits in Pre-Service Teacher Training
5. Availability of Pre-Service Teacher Training
6. Effectiveness of Training
7. Parent Teacher Education Connection Curriculum
8. Methods
The Four Universities
9. Participants
10. Instrument
11. Treatment
12. Data Collection and Analysis
13. Results and Discussion
Changes across All Four Universities
14. Subscale Changes across Full Sample
15. Item-Level Changes across Full Sample
16. Change by University
16.1. South-Urban
16.2. North
16.3. Southwest
16.4. South-Rural
17. Conclusions
18. Implications and Future Directions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Items | Module |
---|---|
Section 1: Teacher Responsibilities | |
1a. Have at least one conference with a parent of each of my students. | Communicating |
1b. Include students in conferences with parents. | Communicating |
1c. Attend evening meetings and performances of my students at school. | Volunteering |
1d. Contact parents when their child has problems or failures. | Communicating |
1e. Inform parents when their child does something well or improves. | Communicating |
1f. Involve parents as volunteers. | Volunteering |
1g. Inform parents of the skills required to pass my class. | Communicating |
1h. Inform parents how students earn report card grades in my class. | Communicating |
1i. Provide ideas to help parents talk with their child about what they learn in my class. | Learning at Home |
1j. Provide specific activities that parents can do to help students improve their grades. | Learning at Home |
1k. Assign homework that requires students to talk with someone at home. | Learning at Home |
1l. Work with other teachers to develop parent involvement activities and materials. | Collaborating w/the Comm |
1m. Work on school policy committees with parents. | Adv & Decision Making |
1n. Request information from parents about their child’s talents, interests, or needs. | Communicating |
Section 2: Parent Responsibilities | |
1o. Work with businesses for volunteers, donations, or other resources to improve programs for my students. | Collaborating w/the Comm |
2a. Set up a quiet place and time for studying at home. | Parenting |
2b. Know what their child is expected to learn each year. | Communicating |
2c. Check regularly that homework is done. | Learning at Home |
2d. Talk with their child at home about what they are learning in class. | Learning at Home |
2e. Encourage child to participate in class. | Parenting |
2f. Ask teachers for specific ideas on how to talk with their child about homework. | Learning at Home |
2g. Talk to teachers about problems their child is facing at home | Communicating |
2h. Attend assemblies and other special events at the school. | Volunteering |
2i. Talk to their child about the importance of school. | Parenting |
2j. Monitor their child’s progress and needs in each subject. | Learning at Home |
2k. Help their child balance homework, home chores, and outside activities. | Parenting |
2l. Volunteer to help the school. | Volunteering |
2m. Join a parent organization or school committee. | Adv & Decision Making |
2n. Encourage their child to participate in community activities. | Collaborating w/the Comm |
2o. Help their child plan for future work or schooling. | Parenting |
Courses in Which PTEC Was Used | Methods of Instruction | Providers of Instruction | Field Experience Components | Basis for Evaluation of Field Learning | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
South-Urban | Families, Schools, and Communities. | Modular content was presented and discussed online by cohorts of four PSTs who then responded online to multiple related case studies and expert reactions. | Faculty course author and graduate student instructors of the online course. | Fifteen hours of fieldwork at a family-serving social service agency accompanied the course. Simulated school-wide one-year action plan for partnerships completed online by groups of four PSTs. | Weekly journals about learnings from the field work. Criteria included inclusion of the six types of parent involvement. |
North | Multicultural Education, Introduction to Early Childhood Education, Mathematics in the Elementary School offered in a block; Middle School seminar. | Modular content followed lesson plans provided by project staff. Plans included introduction to module and its purposes, discussion of case study, completion of related activity, and discussion of expert reactions. | Project graduate assistant taught PTEC portions of the courses to provide consistency. | PSTs in several programs/courses designed and carried out in field settings family nights such as Math is Fun, Turkey Bingo, and Family Math/Science Night. These activities were often part of a 15 h per week methods block. | Evidence of success considered by faculty included responses to surveys completed by parents who attended the PST-led events. |
South-Rural | Classroom Management (for all programs); Fall and Spring Elementary seminars taken prior to and during student teaching. | The Classroom Management course exposed PSTs to one case study from each module. In the two seminars, PSTs studied Parenting, Learning at Home, and Communicating, applying this content in the field. | Regular instructors of the courses with strong support from the clinical instructors in the seminars. | In the seminars, PSTs learned about school practices of parent involvement by visiting Head Start, the Parent Center, and others. The PSTs developed newsletters, and a summer reading calendar. | At Parent Forum at the end of spring semester, PSTs shared their reading calendars and other materials with real parents, who evaluated the forum and made recommendations for next year. |
Southwest | Courses offered each semester to PSTs in one of the cohorts. Courses included seminar, Social Foundations, Math in the Elementary School, and Literacy. | PSTs read modular content independently prior to in-class discussion of related case studies selected by faculty. | Faculty responsible for instruction of the cohort each semester chose the courses, modules, and case studies most related to their course content. | PSTs worked with parents to plan and carry out parent nights held at regular intervals throughout the year; home visits including immigrant and migrant families. | Faculty evaluation was based, in part, on PST and parent assessment of contributions of each to parent night plans and events; reports on home visits. |
Item | Item Description | All | South-Urban | North | Southwest | South-Rural |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Section 1: Teacher Responsibilities | ||||||
Q1a | Parent–teacher conference | −0.81 | −1.51 | −0.50 | 0.59 | −0.50 |
Q1b | Include students in conferences | −3.01 * | −1.11 | −2.68 * | −1.97 ᵼ | −0.31 |
Q1c | Attendance at evening events | −2.24 * | −0.56 | −3.64 ** | −2.38 * | 0.38 |
Q1d | Contact parents with problems | 1.63 | 0.00 | 0.16 | 1.58 | 1.29 |
Q1e | Inform parents of child progress | −0.37 | 0.65 | −1.53 | 0.63 | −0.12 |
Q1f | Involve parents as volunteers | −2.95 * | −2.44 * | −0.13 | −0.13 | −1.87 ᵼ |
Q1g | Inform parents of required skills | −3.55 ** | −3.71 ** | −1.85 ᵼ | −1.80 ᵼ | −0.44 |
Q1h | Inform parents of grading procedures | 2.97 * | −0.85 | −0.14 | −2.50 * | 2.53 * |
Q1i | Teach parents how to discuss learning with child | −9.69 ** | −3.85 ** | −4.71 ** | −2.53 * | −6.94 ** |
Q1j | Specific activities for parents to raise grades | −1.32 | −1.71 ᵼ | −1.10 | 0.32 | 0.00 |
Q1k | Homework involving family at home | −5.05 ** | −2.15 * | −3.56 ** | −2.65 * | −1.62 |
Q1l | Collaborating with other teachers | −4.44 ** | −2.91 * | −2.47 * | −4.12 ** | −0.162 |
Q1m | School policy committees with parents | −5.66 ** | −1.68 ᵼ | −3.16 * | −3.13 * | −2.85 * |
Q1n | Request info from parents about child skills | −2.43 * | −0.50 | −0.71 | −1.47 | −1.33 |
Q1o | Work with community to improve student programs | −5.72 ** | −3.50 ** | −3.04 * | −2.07 * | −2.49 * |
Section 2: Parent Responsibilities | ||||||
Q2a | Set quiet place for home studying | −2.17 * | −1.55 | −0.85 | −0.26 | −1.71 ᵼ |
Q2b | Know what child expected to learn | −1.12 | −1.63 | −1.58 | −0.46 | 0.88 |
Q2c | Regularly check homework | 1.03 | −1.53 | 0.97 | 1.22 | 0.74 |
Q2d | Talk at home about class with student | −1.43 | −0.28 | 0.14 | −1.82 ᵼ | −0.25 |
Q2e | Encourage class participation | −2.64 * | −0.81 | −1.35 | −1.26 | −1.03 |
Q2f | Ask teachers about how to discuss homework | −3.27 ** | −1.00 | −3.15 * | −0.72 | −0.74 |
Q2g | Talk to teachers about home problems | −1.15 | −0.82 | −1.58 | 0.337 | 0.10 |
Q2h | Attend assemblies and other school events | −1.03 | −0.70 | −1.02 | 0.30 | −0.31 |
Q2i | Talk to child about importance of school | 1.79 ᵼ | −0.70 | 0.82 | 2.83 * | 0.65 |
Q2j | Monitor progress in each subject | −1.88 ᵼ | −1.34 | −0.33 | −0.47 | −1.03 |
Q2k | Help child balance homework with other activities | 0.28 | −0.22 | 0.00 | 0.098 | −1.90 ᵼ |
Q2l | Volunteer at school | −14.95 ** | −5.30 ** | −7.52 ** | −9.03 ** | −7.77 ** |
Q2m | Join parent organization/committee | −4.12 ** | −1.21 | −2.77 * | −1.70 | −1.86 ᵼ |
Q2n | Encourage child participation in community | −4.83 ** | −0.59 | −3.77 ** | −1.04 | −3.55 ** |
Q2o | Help child plan for future | −2.59 * | −0.89 | 0.16 | −0.51 | −1.78 ᵼ |
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Nathans, L.; Brown, A. Differences in Pre-Service Teacher Attitude Change about Family Involvement across Four Universities. Societies 2022, 12, 65. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12020065
Nathans L, Brown A. Differences in Pre-Service Teacher Attitude Change about Family Involvement across Four Universities. Societies. 2022; 12(2):65. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12020065
Chicago/Turabian StyleNathans, Laura, and Amber Brown. 2022. "Differences in Pre-Service Teacher Attitude Change about Family Involvement across Four Universities" Societies 12, no. 2: 65. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12020065
APA StyleNathans, L., & Brown, A. (2022). Differences in Pre-Service Teacher Attitude Change about Family Involvement across Four Universities. Societies, 12(2), 65. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12020065