The Center for Universal Education at Brookings recently released survey results about parents’ beliefs and goals for their children’s education. Almost 25,000 parents across ten countries were surveyed. There were three broad findings:
As a parent, who is also an educator, I assert that educators desire these outcomes, too.
Our society is not the same as it was when current students’ parents or grandparents attended school. Since society is not the same, our education system should not be the same. Too many times, instruction looks the same as it did decades ago. This should not be the case.
Currently, we are living through a pandemic. The effects of the pandemic vary, but everyone was impacted. Socio-emotional supports are key. [pullquote position="right"]When students are living through trauma or had a traumatic experience, academics may not be a priority.[/pullquote] Yet, most current educators did not have socio-emotional learning as part of their college education courses. Acknowledging that this gap must be addressed will help students also be academically successful.
What the pandemic made abundantly clear, with a quickness, is that there was a reason parents chose the career path they chose and not education. Teaching is a calling. And taking a page from church, teaching is not everyone’s ministry.
Parents move into certain school districts, switch their children to a public charter school, or pay tuition to a private school because they believe the school will provide their children with a good education. That good education is provided by effective teachers.
Parents expect they can reach out to their children’s teachers for help. [pullquote]Teachers need to be seen as the experts they are and parents should work with teachers to help their children grow.[/pullquote]
The majority of parents care about their children’s education and even have goals and expectations for their children. Teachers, administration, and board members should know what these dreams, hopes and aspirations are.
Programs get implemented—and families are confused about why the program was needed in the first place. When this is the case, families do not buy into the program or initiative as a priority. But, when teachers, administrators, and school board members know what parents desire, decisions can be made in alignment with those goals.
School board members are supposed to respect the families. Teachers and administrators are supposed to be serving students and their families. [pullquote]It is hard to serve anyone well without know their priorities.[/pullquote]
Regardless, of the country, it is clear that parents want to work with the school for their children to succeed.