Parent-Friendly Schools: Some Schools Create Positions, Rooms For Them
- By Lyn Jerde
The Jefferson Elementary School students who hug her in the hallways
ask Kristin Cisewski the same question over and over:
When are the big people coming to school?
The big people are adult volunteers at Jefferson, a K-5 school
of 321 students in Stevens Point. They are parents, residents of the neighborhood,
students from the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, retired people,
and just about anyone else Cisewski can persuade to spend an hour or so
listening to a child read out loud.
Cisewski is coordinator of Jeffersons Family Learning Center, where
the big people have a room of their own.
Wisconsin public schools that set aside a room for adult visitors
and have someone like Cisewski to facilitate adult involvement in schools
help achieve the goal of two-way communication between the school
and the community.
Making families comfortable
Its good to have a place to make families comfortable in
the school, said Jefferson principal Pam Bork.
Cisewski, who recently received her education degree from the University
of Wisconsin-Stout and who hopes to be an early childhood or elementary
teacher someday is a volunteer, working through Volunteers in Service
to America (VISTA), under the auspices of the Wisconsin Department of
Public Instruction.
For one year, her job is to invite more adults into the school and get
them involved with the education of Jeffersons pupils.
By doing this, I really get into a school, and see how a school
works, she said. Thats the benefit for me.
Jeffersons pupils, and its neighborhood, also reap the benefits.
If a parent seeks help for a child who is struggling in school, Bork
assigns Cisewski to work with the parent and seek resources. Those resources
might be community-based programs, in such venues as the public library
or the YMCA.
Or, the resources might be found in the Family Learning Center.
Family Learning Center
Volunteer June Van Alstine-Kans plays a matching blocks game with
a kindergartner in the Family Learning Center at Jefferson School
in Stevens Point. |
The Family Learning Center is a pleasant space. It has a
circular sofa; round tables and chairs that are neither too big for children
nor too small for adults; crayoned pictures drawn by Jefferson students,
decorating the walls; a shelf full of games; and a selection of literature
offering advice on how parents can be involved in school.
On Monday and Thursday evenings, the center is open for a variety of
parent-child activities, such as games and art projects.
The space is also set aside for programs for adults living in the Jefferson
neighborhood classes in English as a second language, U.S. citizenship,
preparation for the General Education Development test. All these meet
neighborhood needs, Cisewski said, because about one-third of the Jefferson
students are of Hmong descent, and some have parents who speak no English.
Bork, Jeffersons principal, wishes for an even better room, though
she wont get it any time soon. On
November 2, Stevens Point School District residents rejected a $55 million
bond referendum that would have added space to all the districts
schools. Included in the plans: a bigger, more private room at Jefferson
for the Family Learning Center.
The current center is small; it used to be a library storage room. It
has no door or wall for privacy; anyone using the center during the day
can hear and see the activities in the library.
Our Family Learning Center is a happening place, and thats
good, Bork said. But its an open spot. And, if you want
to talk in private about your own child, that isnt the place to
do that.
Cisewski is quick to add that there are school districts facing even
greater space challenges than Jeffersons, as they seek to set aside
space for parents and volunteers.
Space problems in Antigo
Take, for example, the Antigo School District, where volunteer Peggy
Ponta is starting a reading tutoring program involving parents and other
volunteers in 12 Antigo area public schools and two parochial schools.
You remember when you went to grade school, and they had coat rooms?
she asked. Well, if we need a place to help a child in private for
15 to 20 minutes, thats where we can do that. In some schools, there
may be no room at all, and they may have to find a little cubbyhole.
Another common challenge is continuity in staffing.
VISTA rules allow its volunteers to facilitate community involvement
for no more than two years. After that, any school that wants to continue
to have a person performing that job must find a way to pay for it.
Bork said Jefferson is joining forces with Stevens Points Madison
Elementary School to apply for a federal 21st Century Learning Grant
$500,000 to pay for various after-school programs, including the salary
of a liaison to do what Cisewski does now.
Milwaukee parent helps others
Victory School in Milwaukee has such a liaison, paid by the Milwaukee
Public Schools.
The post used to be voluntary, said Victory parent coordinator Dawn Poznanski.
At first it was four hours a week, then 20, and now she works more than
30 hours a week reaching out to parents.
Poznanski has three children ages 5, 8 and 9 who attend
Victory, a multi-age, multi-unit school, which is K-6 now, but is scheduled
to be K-7 in the 2000-2001 school year, and K-8 by 2001-2002.
Im a parent, Poznanski said. Im not here
to solve problems, but to help parents find the resources that can solve
the problems.
Parents have a room
Parents visiting Victory can go into a room that used to be a teachers
lunchroom. There, theyll find two sofas, tables and chairs, a computer,
and beverages (coffee or soda).
Its OK, Poznanski chuckled. Granted, it could
be better furnished, but we dont have the funds.
Most importantly, she said, the room offers a place where parents can
close the door and talk to another parent Poznanski about
any challenges or struggles their children may have in school.
Poznanski said she does this work partly because a previous parent coordinator
at Victory, Regina Hull-Jackson, came to her aid several years ago.
Poznanski had been injured in an accident, and was unable to walk.
Like many parents she meets now, Poznanski had the perception that parental
involvement requires a parent to be in the school building for several
hours a week something she could not manage in her physical condition.
But Hull-Jackson reached out to her, and offered her ideas on how to
be involved from home. She could cut out flannel figures for kindergartners.
She could contact legislators about school issues.
Today, she tries to convey a similar message to other Victory parents,
that their involvement in their childrens education begins at home.
Its getting the kids fed, getting them dressed, getting them
to bed, she said. If parents dont do these things, then
there isnt much we can do for the children here at school.
Poznanski said her greatest challenge is assuaging parents discomfort
about being in schools. Sometimes, thats based on intimidation
a feeling with which she empathizes.
|  Family Learning Center Coordinator Kristin Cisewski shares a
book with 5th-grade student Michelle Zielinski at Jefferson Elementary
School in Stevens Point. The comfortable and inviting Family Learning
Center used to be a library storage area. Photo by Lyn
Jerde |
Preparing for conferences
She said she was terrified when she went to her first parent-teacher
conference with her oldest childs kindergarten teacher. She didnt
know what questions to ask, and didnt always understand the education
terminology that the teacher used. Now, she teaches parents who ask for
her help how to prepare for, and get the most out of, conferences with
teachers.
Also, Poznanski said, parents discomfort in the schools is sometimes
based on their childhood memories of the classroom.
Were confronted with things that probably never happened
at this school, but may have happened to them, or someone they knew, when
they were in school.
Other challenges include the varied needs of the schools diverse
population. About 68% of the students ride the bus to school. The student
body includes whites, African-Americans, Asians, Native Americans, Hispanics,
Hmong, and a rapidly growing group of Arabic students.
Sometimes, language barriers pose a challenge. Sometimes, the students
come from cultures that are not accustomed to having parents involved
in their childrens education.
Reaching out to business
Poznanski, in partnership with a VISTA volunteer, is also reaching out
to nearby businesses, enlisting their involvement. One success story:
A local Builders Square store sends employees to the school to help students
with building projects, such as making birdhouses.
I would rather see businesses get involved by offering their expertise
instead of money, Poznanski said. I know how much we need
the money, but Id rather see business people offer their expertise
to our children.
At Jefferson in Stevens Point, Cisewski has enjoyed some success in getting
community members who are not parents involved in her tutoring program.
For example, one of her volunteers is a man with cerebral palsy. Cisewski
said the children enjoy volunteering to hold the book for the man while
he reads to them. He speaks with the aid of a liberator
an electronic device that simulates a voice
But, even with a liaison and a room for adults, encouraging involvement
remains a challenge, Cisewski said.
In homes with single parents, or with two parents who both work full
time, it can be difficult to get parents into the school with their children.
Its a high frustration level when you cant get hold
of parents, Cisewski said. I dont think its lack
of interest in their children. Its that theyre not able, because
their financial status means theyre always working.
Similar issue at Victory School
Poznanski finds the same challenges among parents of Victory students.
If I can get two parents involved who never participated in school
before, thats a big thing for us, and its a big thing for
the children to see Mom and Dad coming to school events for the
very first time.
Open the doors wide
Bork, the Jefferson principal, said it helps schools greatly to have
someone besides administrators and teachers reaching out to get the community
involved and offering them a room of their own whenever they enter
the school.
We see a lot of people who feel disenfranchised by their schools,
she said.
We need to take every opportunity to open wide our school doors,
and say to the people, Come on in.
Posted January 19, 2000