Parent-teacher conferences provide a way for
staff and families to better to connect to support students. They can also be
stressful for all parties involved. Parents and teachers may be nervous about
what the other will say to them about the child. To make conferences more
pleasant and strengthen relationships remember the importance of promoting good
will. Your job as a teacher will be easier if parents are your partners and
look forward to your conversations with them about their child.
While academic performance and test scores have
their place, this information is easily accessed by parents. When you meet
face-to-face parents want to know that you genuinely know and care about their
child.
Here is how to do that.
Ask students what parents want to know
Middle school English teacher and Y.A. author SJ
Donovan explained that to
prepare for parent-teacher night, she asked her students what they thought
their parents wanted to hear from her about their class. Students shared that
parents would want to know about her methodologies, teaching style, and how she
integrates technology into learning. She shares their ideas in
this post. Adding to Donovan’s
idea, I would also ask each class member to share their response so that you
have a personalized message for each parent. This also gives those less
inclined to speak in public a chance to have their voice heard. You might want
to consider using FlipGrid for this. (Not sure what FlipGrid is? Read this
overview from Sean Arnold’s,
“Brave in the Attempt” blog.
When parent-teacher night begins, the teacher
can kick it off to a parent group a discussion sharing with them what their
children want them to know about how they spend their day. In some schools
there can be limited time for one-to-one conversations. This strategy
gives all parents a general sense of what they can expect for their child.
Ask parents what they want you to know about their child
If there is time for one-on-one conversations,
the teacher can start by sharing that one idea their child wanted their parent
to know. Next, the teacher can ask the parent what they want their teacher to
know about their child and the teacher can record that in the child’s file or
it can be left as a reply on FlipGrid.
Discuss how the child thrives
The teacher can review key pieces of the
student’s learning profile with parent. Thrively is a tool that allows
you to collect a free report of how every child thrives and ideas to support
that at school and home. If possible, give the parent a printed report to take
home. If you not able to print it, let them know how to access the report.
This article
shares more on Thrively and how students can
begin their free strength assessment.
Classroom learning stations
In some schools teachers have a line of parents
waiting out the door. Make use of that time. Have stations set up around the
room for parents to learn more about what happens in the class. If possible
each station would have a student at the helm sharing with parents. Stations
can also be independently accessed. The stations could contain student work
that is physical. It could contain a slideshow on a laptop with useful
ideas for learning at home. There might be a station with recorded student
presentations. Maybe there is a bulletin board where parents can scan QR codes
to learn and see more about students and their work.
Parent Agenda & Notes
Have an agenda that fits on one page so parents
know what to expect and have a place to record notes. This helps you to frame
and focus the conversation and provides follow up notes for the parent. Here’s a
sample you can customize and use for your own class.
Your Turn
What do you think? Are there ideas here that
could work in your school or classroom? Have you tried any of these ideas? What
has worked well? What challenges have you encountered?
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