This post was published in the Wilson Times on Sept.
21, 2019.
Tuesday’s headline in the
Wilson Times proclaimed, “Parents are key to student success.” A proper
response to this news might be, “well, duh!”
Recent studies have shown
that it is not unskilled teachers, incapable students or poor school
administration that cause failures in public schools. It’s the home environment
that makes the difference between student success and student failure.
America has been trying at
least since the 1983 “A Nation At Risk” report to tinker with curriculum,
accountability, teacher training and motivation, teaching techniques and school
governance in hopes of improving public education. But the problems cited by
the Reagan administration report continue to plague public schools in America.
Recent studies have found
that schools whose students come from homes with incomes in the top quartile of
wealth have higher success scores than schools whose students come primarily
from low-income or below-poverty-level homes. You can change teachers, change
principals, change curriculum, change school spending and still find the same
educational results based on income.
Students from homes with
well-educated parents will do better than students with less-educated,
lower-income parents. Beyond simple income, there are reasons for the disparity
between high-achieving schools and low-scoring schools. Teachers, the focus of
much of the educational reforms over the past quarter century, have about six
hours a day to alter the lives of students. Their home environments have those
students for the remaining 18 hours a day.
The low income of some
families often comes with additional educational handicaps: uneducated or
poorly educated parents, violence in the home, lack of reading resources (each
class of kindergartners might include students who have never been read to),
overwhelmed, under-employed parents and unstable family relations.
I’m glad to see Wilson
County Schools is paying attention to students’ home environments. The school
system is offering a Parents Academy to teach parents how to help their
children be more successful in school. Some tips are quite simple: Be in
school, be on time, set a routine for school days and ensure children follow
the routine, make school a priority.
Unlike most possessions,
children do not come with instruction manuals, and some parents have had little
guidance or negative influences in how to care for children and help them grow
into successful adults. A parent might have had a bad school experience and
dropped out. Such a parent might transfer her distaste for education to her
children, perpetuating an unfortunate experience to another generation.
A Parents Academy cannot
compensate for poverty, a lack of reading materials in the home, absent fathers
or other difficulties. The academy can teach parents how to improve their
children’s behavior and help them be more successful in school. It can change
attitudes, ambitions, goals and values. Children need to experience
unconditional love and a stable home. A school system cannot provide that, but
schools can show parents how to help their children succeed.
The rest is up to the
parents — and the student.
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