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Fostering Family Engagement through Shared Leadership in The District, Schools, and Community

In this ethnographic case study, Ann M. Ishimaru examines how a collaboration emerged and evolved between a low-income Latino parent organizing group and the leadership of a rapidly changing school district. Using civic capacity and community organizing theories, Ishimaru seeks to understand the role of parents, goals, strategies, and change processes that characterize a school district’s collaboration with a community-based organization. Her findings suggest an emergent model of collaboration that engages parents as educational leaders, focuses on shared systemic goals, strategically builds capacity and relationships, and addresses educational change as political process. This emergent model stands in contrast to traditional partnerships between communities and school or district leadership that often reflect deficit conceptions of marginalized parents and families. By rewriting the rules of engagement, parents, families, and community members can contribute critical resources to enable districts and schools to educate all students more equitably.

Resource Link

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Topic
  • Community building
  • Equity
  • Family and community collaboration
  • Family and community engagement
  • Two-way communication
Type
  • Article (news or journal)
  • Report (policy, research)
Role
  • District
  • School Leader
Section
  • Family and Community Collaboration
  • Family Engagement
  • Family Support
  • Strategies for English Learners
  • Families
  • Keeping Students and Families Engaged
  • Anti-Racism, Bias, Relevance, Cultural Responsiveness
  • English Learner Strategies