Communication is Key in Staying Engaged in Your Child’s Education

This is a sponsored posts in collaboration with LivingTree.com. All opinions are my own.

Ongoing research shows that family engagement in schools improves student achievement, reduces absenteeism, and restores parents’ confidence in their children’s education. (NEAtoday.org)

Parents are their children’s most important people in their education career and teachers are second. In my personal conversations with other parents, I have learned that how well they ‘like’ their child’s teacher strongly depends on the communication they have with the teacher. Typically, parents want information about how their child is learning, what their child is learning and how they behave in class. It is also important for parents to share with teachers how the child is doing at home, if any important changes would affect the child at school. Open communication between these parties will lead to more engagement which will benefit the student.

Raising the Pride - LivingTree conncects the people who raise and develop our children. QueMeansWhat.com

In a study listed in the Economics of Education Review, it was reported that communication as simple as a weekly one-sentence teacher-to-parent messaging intervention reduced the percentage of students who failed summer courses from 16% to 9%. Parental engagement is correlated with student performance. If the example above is telling of what simple communication can do, it would be to the benefit of all students to improve parent-teacher communication.

There’s still one piece missing. Language. Many times, especially in the Latino community, parents aren’t engaged simply because of the difficulty of communicating with faculty who don’t speak the same language. Often, the student is expected to translate between parents and teachers. This obviously has its flaws.

How can parent-teacher communication improve to ensure that all parties work together for the student’s education?

One place to start is taking a look at how an online resource like LivingTree could serve your family and school. LivingTree is a single, private and secure place to connect and coordinate via conversations (messages, photos, files, links), shared calendar (volunteer management, notifications, reminders, and more), private messaging, and more. LivingTree extends learning beyond the classroom to further develop children through building community relationships.

LivingTree on the Go - QueMeansWhat.com

Since we are all busy and always on-the-go, any communication tool serves the user better when it can be accessed from mobile devices. The LivingTree network platform can be accessed via the web, or any iPhone or Android product. It supports translation in 40+ languages and is built on the latest web and mobile technologies and backed by a highly scalable cloud deployment.

Parents can type and receive messages in their native language while teachers can type and receive messages in English. As the Hispanic population continues to grow in the United States, this is an important issue to address. Parents deserve to have easier communication with their child’s teachers despite a difference in language.

WATCH the testimonial from Irving ISD below:

Consider signing up for your own account on LivingTree.com I did! I can see myself using this platform for our own organizations to stay connected easily but not on social media. You can still join the communication on social media. In fact, join us for a Twitter Party this week!

#LivingTree Twitter Party

Date: 9/23/15

Time: 4:00 – 5:00 P.M. (Central Time)

Top (5) participants will be awarded with a $100 gift card from LivingTree!

RSVP via Facebook Event Page: https://www.facebook.com/events/1678753722347919/

WHO TO FOLLOW:
The official hashtag: #LivingTree
Hosts: @quemeanswhat @candypo @eileenccampos
Guests: @elianatardio @tianydavis @lafamiliacool

[Tweet “Join the Education Communication #LivingTree Twitter Chat on 9/23 4pm CST”]

SEE YOU THERE!