This Week’s Parent-Teacher Chat (#ptchat) on Twitter.
LINK TO SHARED 2-WAY COMMUNICATION DOC
Full Text of Chat via Storify
On this week’s #ptchat our conversational goal is to provide educators with as many classroom and school-based two-way (home-school) communication offerings as possible. At the end of the chat, we’ll use those “tweets” to develop a shared Google Doc for schools to use/update throughout the 12-13 school year.
Full Text of Chat via Storify
On this week’s #ptchat our conversational goal is to provide educators with as many classroom and school-based two-way (home-school) communication offerings as possible. At the end of the chat, we’ll use those “tweets” to develop a shared Google Doc for schools to use/update throughout the 12-13 school year.
Communication is
evident when educators and families “...communicate about school programs and
student progress in varied, clear and productive ways. Create two-way
communication channels from school to home and from home to school, so that families
can easily keep in touch with teachers, administrators, counselors and other
families” (Epstein, 2011). Below are the rest of Epstein’s Six Types of
Involvement.
1.
Parenting, in which schools help families with their parenting skills by
providing information on children’s developmental stages and offering advice on
learning-friendly home environments;
2.
Communicating, or working to educate families about their child’s progress
and school services and providing opportunities for parents to communicate with
the school;
3.
Volunteering, which ranges from offering opportunities for parents to visit their
child’s school to finding ways to recruit and train them to work in the school
or classroom;
4.
Learning at home, in which schools and educators share ideas to promote at-home learning
through high expectations and strategies so parents can monitor and help with
homework.
5.
Decision-making, in which schools include families as partners in school organizations,
advisory panels, and similar committees.
6.
Community collaboration, a two-way outreach strategy in which community or business groups are
involved in education and schools encourage family participation in the
community.
Communication
can travel in a variety of ways. The two most common ways are one-way and two-way.
One-way communication is limited because it is linear or occurs in a straight
line from the sender to the receiver. This type of communication serves
strictly to inform, persuade or command.
Two-way
communication is different because it includes feedback from the receiver back
to the sender. Two-way communication is negotiated, meaning that both the
sender and receiver listen to each other and gather information they need
before responding. They are also willing to make changes to work together.
Join us this
Wednesday, July 11th at 9PM EDT / 6PM PST as parents and teacher
build a working document to support two-way home-school communication efforts.
If you are using Tweetchat to take part in our chat, here's how to participate... 1) log into to Tweetchat 2) enter your Twitter credentials 3) type #ptchat into the search bar and the conversation will appear automatically for you to engage in any way you choose. The tool takes the hashtag out of your available 140 characters making way for you to participate without the need to type "ptchat" at the end of each sentence. Looking forward to your sharing...
If you are using Tweetchat to take part in our chat, here's how to participate... 1) log into to Tweetchat 2) enter your Twitter credentials 3) type #ptchat into the search bar and the conversation will appear automatically for you to engage in any way you choose. The tool takes the hashtag out of your available 140 characters making way for you to participate without the need to type "ptchat" at the end of each sentence. Looking forward to your sharing...













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