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Bridging School and Home Through Family Nights
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Bridging School and Home Through Family Nights
Ready-to-Use Plans for Grades K-8



August 2005 | 192 pages | Corwin
Teachers know that connections with families will reap benefits, but they struggle with the "how." Research shows that there is a link between family involvement and their children's academic success. Other research shows that children learn best when instruction is meaningful and connects to the knowledge they and their families hold.

Family nights are after-school, evening, or weekend events which involve families (adults and children) in enjoyable and academically grounded activities and experiences. Family nights provide a way for schools to learn about and from families and for families to learn about and from schools. The ultimate beneficiaries are the students who benefit from such increased involvement and from improved communication and understanding.

Reproducibles and other materials include:

" Invitations

" Agendas

" Sign-in sheets

" Evaluation forms

" Activity worksheets

" Handouts

" Overheads

" Additional resources

" Connections with national standards

" Tips and suggestions for an outstanding event

Includes information on adaptions for special populations, issues around providing food and incentives, and cost-saving ideas. Each chapter is a self-contained unit, containing all information, suggestions, and materials for planning and running a successful event. All family night designs have an academic focus and are aligned with standards.

This book is appropriate for primary teachers and headteachers or anyone in the school or district responsible for family involvement.

 
Preface
 
About the Authors
 
1. Getting Families Involved in School Through Family Nights
 
2. Scrapbook Family Night: Preserving Memories in Words and Pictures
 
3. Books, Books, and More Books: A Reading-Focused Family Night
 
4. Meet Our Pets Family Night
 
5. A Morning of Family Fun With Math
 
6. Sharing Family Stories and Traditions Night
 
7. Game-Making/Writing Family Night for Developing Writing Skills
 
8. Pajama Party Family Night: A Reading Event
 
9. Meeting Famous People Through Biographies Family Night
 
10. Sharing Hobbies, Talents, and Interests Family Night
 
11. Poetry Family Morning
 
12. Making Science Fun Family Night
 
13. Fun With Language: A Family Night of Riddles, Jokes, and Cartoons
 
14. Health and Wellness Family Night
 
15. Next Steps: Getting the Most Out of Family Nights
 
Resource A: Reproducible Planning Guide
 
Resource B: Reproducible Sign-in Sheet
 
Resource C: Helpful Web Sites
 
Resource D: Spanish Translations of Invitations
 
References
 
Index

"The authors suggest that Family Night benefits include increased parental participation, stronger partnerships, and better teaching/learning in the classroom. This book is recommended to anyone interested in improving students' academic achievement through parental involvement."

Principal Navigator, March 2007

Diane W. Kyle

Diane W. Kyle is a professor in the Department of Teaching and Learning at the University of Louisville. She has coauthored Reaching Out: A K–8 Resource for Connecting Schools and Families and Reflective Teaching for Student Empowerment: Elementary Curriculum and Methods, coedited Creating Nongraded Primary Classrooms: Teachers’ Stories and Lessons Learned, and pub­lished in such journals as Language Arts, Peabody Journal of Education, Journal of Education for Students Placed at Risk, Education & Equity, Teaching Children Mathematics, and Elementary School Journal. Her most recent project, co­directed with Ellen McIntyre, is “Sheltered... More About Author

Ellen McIntyre

Ellen McIntyre is a literacy professor in the Department of Teaching and Learning at the University of Louisville, where she teaches courses on lit­eracy research and instruction and studies children’s development in light of instructional contexts. She has published extensively, having coau­thored Reaching Out: A K–8 Resource for Connecting Schools and Families, coedited Classroom Diversity: Connecting School Curricula to Students’ Lives, Balanced Instruction: Strategies and Skills in Whole Language, and Creating Nongraded Primary Programs, and published in such journals as Language Arts, Research in the Teaching of English, Journal of... More About Author

Karen B. Miller

Karen B. Miller has taught elementary school for more  than 20 years in grades 1–4. She currently teaches at Roby Elementary in Bullitt County, Kentucky. For two years, she participated as a teacher-researcher on the study, “Children’s Academic Development in Nongraded Primary Programs,” funded by the Center for Research on Education, Diversity, and Excellence (CREDE) at the University of California at Santa Cruz. Making family visits during this time enabled her to learn more about the students in her classroom and to make connections in her instruction, often through Family Nights she planned and implemented. She has co­authored... More About Author

Gayle H. Moore

Gayle H. Moore recently retired after teaching elementary school for 31 years at grades K–8, including 9 years in the nongraded primary program at LaGrange Elementary in Oldham County, Kentucky. Throughout that time, she participated as a teacher-researcher on studies related to the nongraded primary. She has coauthored Reaching Out: A K–8 Resource for Connecting Schools and Families, a chapter in Creating Nongraded Primary Classrooms: Teachers’ Stories and Lessons Learned, and articles in Language Arts and Peabody Journal of Education. She has presented at conferences of the American Educational Research Association, the International... More About Author

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