1 / 18

Action Research Proposal on Parent Involvement in Early Childhood

Action Research Proposal on Parent Involvement in Early Childhood. By: Krista Morrison Arkansas State University E-mail: krista.morrison@smail.astate.edu. Do Types of Parent Involvement in Early Childhood Effect Preschool Children’s Learning Outcomes?.

dorit
Télécharger la présentation

Action Research Proposal on Parent Involvement in Early Childhood

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Action Research Proposal on Parent Involvement in Early Childhood By: Krista Morrison Arkansas State University E-mail: krista.morrison@smail.astate.edu

  2. Do Types of Parent Involvement in Early Childhood Effect Preschool Children’s Learning Outcomes? In recent years policy makers and educational experts have expressed alarm about the growing problem of parent involvement and its effect on student out comes in the United States.

  3. What is Parent Involvement?

  4. Why Do We Research Types of Parent Involvement?

  5. Participants • The participants will be... • Randomly Selected from a single classroom • Six Children • Three Male Three Female • Parents of the Children

  6. Procedure • Selection of participants • Hold a preview and sign up meeting • Test children and give a post test • Issue a post survey to the parents • Conduct various parent /child activities • Complete post test on children • Complete post test on parents • Compile data • Report findings in paper

  7. Time Line • September 3 • Random selection of participants, briefing and consents. • Establish parent involvement types and times they will occur. • October 10 • Pre-test for children and pre-questionnaire for parents. • October 17 • Mid- term meeting with parents • October 24 • Administer post-test for children and post questionnaire for adults • November1 • Collect all data and process results. • November 8 • Conclude and write paper • November15 • Turn in paper

  8. The Three Types of Parent Involvement Include…

  9. Take Home Activities and Home Visits include but not limited to… • Take home activities for the child and parent to be involved in • Parent can make materials for the classroom and for home activities with their child • Being present for the home visits made by the teacher and paraprofessional

  10. Full Involvement in all Activities

  11. Some Sample Questions on the Parent Questionnaire are … • Will you please define Parent Involvement? • How many times a week are you actively involved in activities with your child? • Do you work? • Are you married or do you live with a significant other that assist you I the care and support of your child? • Do you have transportation? • What is your income? • Do you have other children in the home? • When would you be available to be involved with your child in activities?

  12. Data Collection should Show a comparison as follows… • Parent Pre Questionnaire • Child Pre Test • Data collection of the Parent involvement • Parent Post Questionnaire • Child Post Test • Data collection of the Childs improvement

  13. Some Samples of Data Collection are Children Parents Teacher Observed Parent/Child Interaction Parent Attendance Records Photos Materials made for the classroom • Portfolios • Teacher Observations • Teacher Observed Parent/Child Interaction • Photos

  14. How Might this Proposed Action Research be Significant? • The research could have a significant effect on the practice of how we involve parents in the early childhood classroom. • The research could have a significant effect on the learning outcomes of young children. • The research could significantly change the structure of the curriculum to include the parent more and discover the type or types of parent activities that work the best. • The research could lead to further studies of this nature and effect trends in research.

  15. Conclusion • The research will be positively or negatively skewed • The value of this study could prove that one specific type of parent involvement activity is effective on learning outcomes for young children • The active research lends itself to further investigation either way that the data is skewed. • The research could have an impact on the profession of early childhood.

  16. Parent Involvement Has a Direct impact on Learning Outcomes in Early Childhood Lets all join hands to improve our parent involvement for the benefit of the children

  17. References Arnold, D., Zelio, A., Doctoroff, G., &Ortis, C. (2008). Parent involvement in preschool: predictors and the relation of involvement to pre-literacy development. School Psychology Review, 17(1), 74-90. Buyuktaskaup, S. Department of Preschool Education, Education Science Theory and Practice.(2012). Effect of family supported pre-reading training program given to children in preschool education period on reading success in primary school. Retrieved from Educational Consultancy and Research Center website: www.edam.com.tr/estp Hay, I., & Fielding-Barnsley, R. (2007). Facilitating children's emergent literacy using shared reading: Aa comparison of two models. Australian Journal of Language and Literacy, 30(3), 191-202. Hilado , A., Kallemeyn, L., Leow, C., Lundy, M., &Isreal , M. (2011). Supporting child welfare and parent involvement in preschool programs.Early Childhood Education, 39, 343-353. Knopf, H., &Swick, K. (2008).Using our understanding of families to strengthen family involvement.Early Childhood Education, 35, 419-427. Karlson, I., &Simonsson, M. (2008). Preschool work teams' view of ways of working with gender-parents' involvement. Early Childhood Education, 36, 171-177. Korfmacher, J., Green, B., Staerkel, F., Peterson, C., Cook, G., Roggman, L., Faldowski, R., &Schiffman, R. (2008). Parent involvement in early childhood home visitiing.Child Youth Care Forum, 37, 171-196.

  18. References LaForett, D., & Mendez, J. (2010).Parent involvement, parental depression, and program satisfaction among low-income parents participating in a two- generation early childhood education program.Early Childhood Education and Development, 21(4), 517-535. Lynch, J. (2009). Preschool teachers' beliefs about children’s print literacy development.Early Years, 29(2), 191-203. Markstrom, A. (2011). To involve parents in the assessment of the child in parent-teacher conferences: A case study. EarlyChildhood Education, 38, 465-474. Pang, Y. (2010).Facilitating family involvement in early intervention to preschool transition.The School Community Journal, 20(2), 183-198. Renolds, A., White, B., & Robertson, D. (2011). Age 26 cost-benefit analysis of the child-parent center early education program. Child Development, 82(1), 379-404. Swanson, J., Raab, M., &Dunst, C. (2011).Strengthening family capacity to provide young children everyday natural learning opportunities.Journal of Early Childhood Research, 9(1), 66-80. Tekin, A. (2011). Parent involvement revisited:background, theories, and models. Ijaes, 11(1), 2- 13. Zellman, G., & Perlman, M. (2006). Parent involvement in childcare settings:conceptual and measurement issues. Early Child Development, 176(5), 521-538.

More Related