Influence Of Parent-School Partnership And Community-School Partnership On Lower Primary School Social Behaviour In Southwestern Nigeria.

Author(s):  
Dr. V. O. Adediran ◽  
◽  
Dr. B. A. Adeyemi ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 67 (4) ◽  
pp. 251-265 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lesley Wood ◽  
Mary McAteer

When academics, who occupy a traditional position of power and privilege, engage with community members whose thinking, attitudes, and responses have been shaped by ongoing sociohistorical oppression and disadvantage, democratic participation is not easy to attain. Yet, unless community members feel able to participate freely, the valuable local knowledge they bring to the project will be lost and the learning will again be based on theories that may have little relevance for them. We explain how power relations can be leveled through the utilization of specific strategies within a participatory action research design. Seven community members and five teachers collaborated to develop a program that the community members would later use to educate parents about how to better support their children academically. Informed by a qualitative analysis of visual and textual data generated in several working sessions for this project, findings indicate that, while the flattening of power relations is an ongoing and complex task, specific strategies can be used to “level the playing fields” and negotiate the intricacies of power, privilege, and participation.


1990 ◽  
Vol 51 (4) ◽  
pp. 422
Author(s):  
Edward Bailey ◽  
Leslie J. Francis

Author(s):  
Imke Wies van Mil ◽  
Olga Popovic Larsen ◽  
Karina Mose ◽  
Anne Iversen

AbstractA range of artificial lighting characteristics have been found to influence our visual and cognitive capabilities, mood, motivation and/or (social) behaviour—all affecting how we (academically) perform. One such influential characteristic is spatial contrast, or the way light is distributed in space causing a pattern of light and darkness. This study looks at if and how spatial contrast influences pupil behaviour, and specifically their ability to concentrate. We first explored whether variances in pupil noise, physical activity and mood, which have been found to affect concentration, occur when exposed to either a high or a low spatial contrast in their learning environment. Preliminary data from field experiments in a primary school indicates towards decreased noise levels and improved environmental satisfaction when a high spatial contrast condition is present. This implies improved environmental circumstances to concentrate. Further research to confirm this assumption will be undertaken.


Author(s):  
Jacqueline Shek

Home-school partnership has been recognized as an important approach to promote student learning since the last century. Though families bear an inevitable role to teach reading at home, teachers and parent volunteers working together at school may motivate those students who are uninterested or less supported by their families to read. The interests of the current readers may also be strengthened. This paper presents a parent-child reading programme adopted in a Hong Kong primary school that engaged parent volunteers to read with the children in the morning. The objectives, the detailed plan and evaluation methods are discussed. After a year of implementation, the P.1 and P.2 students involved had remarkable improvements in various skills such as prediction skills, reading aloud and communication skills. Moreover, it served as a media to promote home-school partnership.


1994 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 72-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
Viviane M.J. Robinson ◽  
Helen S. Timperley ◽  
Judy M. Parr ◽  
Stuart McNaughton

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