Five Rs for Promoting Positive Family Engagement (2024)

Developing positive partnerships with the families of the children you teach is one of your most important tasks as a teacher. It can also be among the scariest or the most challenging tasks! I offer five Rs—respect, responsiveness and reassurance, relationship, reciprocity, and reflection—to help you build trust and promote positive family engagement in your preschool classroom.

Families Want Respect

Showing families respect is more than being polite—it is esteeming or honoring families. Family members want to feel respected as their child’s first and most important teacher; they also want to see that you respect their family values, culture, and home experiences. Respect does not equate to agreeing with every decision made by families. It means being aware of your own biases and making sure that your own ideas, beliefs, and opinions don’t interfere with your work to understand each families’ choices and circ*mstances.

Respect also calls on educators to embrace a strengths-based approach to their interactions with children and families. In other words, a strengths-based approach demonstrates respect for families by recognizing, appreciating, and celebrating what they bring to a program or school. Families are viewed as contributors, creators, and participants.

Here are strategies you can utilize to develop respect:

  • Listen to families.First and foremost, allow enough time to truly listen to families. This confirms for families that their thoughts, suggestions, and opinions matter and are valued.
  • Maintain constant communication with families through apps and other means.Use an app (like Seesaw or Bloomz.com) or design a private, secure webpage that includes the classroom newsletter, weekly plans, photos of the children, a resources and upcoming events section, a forum for asking questions, and an activity for families to complete with their children each week. Activities should be meaningful and doable, such as an “all about me” questionnaire (which you might complete first to help introduce yourself to children and families). You can also share photos and videos. Include the same items on a family bulletin board inside or near your classroom.
  • Foster classroom community with a Family of the Week backpack.To foster cross-cultural learning and deeper relationships in an ongoing way, ask family members to complete an “all about my family” activity that you package in a backpack. Ask families to include items that are important to them in the backpack and to unpack it in class as they share information about each item and answer children’s questions. If family members are not able to join in person, don’t worry. They can join virtually using video conferencing (like Zoom) or share a recorded video of themselves unpacking the backpack and explaining the items they pull out. If families are unable to participate directly, the child can share the backpack while showing pictures of their family.Suggest that families include items that represent their culture, a favorite family memory, and a family interest or hobby.

Use the information and experiences shared to connect with the broader curriculum so that families’ funds of knowledge are integrated into learning in meaningful and sustained ways. For example, find children’s literature that mirrors cultures, languages, and experiences shared. (Check out weneeddiversebooks.org or tfcbooks.org/best-recommended/booklist to find children’s books that celebrate diversity.)

Families Want Reassurance and Responsiveness

Family members need to be reassured that you care about meeting their child where they are and that you are knowledgeable about their child as an individual and as a part of social and cultural communities. They want to be reassured that their child will not be singled out, labeled, forgotten, or harmed—but will be kept safe and be engaged in activities that are suited to their child’s unique strengths, interests, preferences, and needs. They also want to feel that you are responsive and that they can trust you to address their concerns and questions. For educators to be responsive, they must embrace flexibility. Educators who are flexible in their understanding, their expectations, and their responses to the families they serve will build that trust.

Here are strategies you can utilize to offer reassurance:

  • Take a lot of photos and videos.Keep a device nearby to take photos and video recordings (and keep in mind which families have agreed to have their children photographed and what types of sharing they are permitting). Families want to know what their child does during the day, who they play with, the activities they enjoy, and how they are progressing. Most love keeping up with these things through photos and videos. Sharing photos and videos weekly gives every family regular opportunities to peek into their child’s daily school routine, which also helps to reassure them that their child is happy and is learning at their program. Make sure you gather documentation for every child on a regular basis to share with their families. (To learn more, read Experiences Can’t Go Home in Cubbies: Using Digital Technology and Documentation to Connect with Families,by Stephanie Haney.)
  • Provide daily or mid-week talking points.Unlike more thorough weekly updates, talking points can be just a few sentences to let families know topics, concepts, or vocabulary words that their children are learning and how to expand on those things at home.
  • Pick up the phone.Responding to family members is the most important and easiest way to develop a trusting relationship with them and to reassure them that you are on their team. Respond to phone calls, emails, and other messages within 24 hours. Returning these in a timely manner reassures families because it shows that their questions, thoughts, and concerns are important to you.

Families Want a Relationship

Creating and maintaining partnerships with families is a critical component of developmentally appropriate practice and for good reason: families have expertise about their children, and they play a critical role in their child’s growth and learning. When families do not feel that they are part of the classroom community, they might distance themselves from the school or program. This might impact their willingness to interact with you and to volunteer in classroom activities.

Here are strategies you can utilize to build relationships:

  • Say “Hello!”It is amazing how far a simple Hello! will go toward building a positive relationship. Just by acknowledging a family member’s presence, you are being welcoming. Short, inviting conversations can lead to positive relationships and family engagement.
  • Invite family members into your classroom community.Some families may not know whether they are allowed to be involved in their child’s classroom and may not be clear about how to support their child’s learning at home. This provides a great opportunity to help the family become engaged with your program’s community and to share activities for extended learning. Invite families to serve as a mystery reader or a mystery guest speaker (virtually or in-person). Ask children to guess the mystery reader or speaker by providing clues. For at-home learning, provide a weekly calendar (such as the one provided at RIF.org) of activities families can do at home with their children.
  • Make it easy for families to ask questions.Offer opportunities at the program and online for families to communicate any questions, concerns, comments, or suggestions they may have. You could create forum space on your classroom webpage, in your newsletter, or on your family bulletin board. You could also have a comment box in your classroom for families to share more private communications.

Families Want Reciprocity

Reciprocity often involves a shift in thinking about engagement and communication because it relies oninterdependence, or depending on each other to accomplish something. One member of a relationship must coordinate their thinking and actions with others to reach shared understanding and decision making. Such coordination involves being flexible with our approaches and expectations. When we do so, we can foster a supportive and trusting relationship with families and enhance their motivation to communicate and participate.

Here are strategies you can utilize to practice reciprocity:

  • Involve families by dialoguing and including them in making decisions.Inquire about a family’s goals and expectations for their child, their child’s teacher, and their child’s school. Telling families about their child is a one-way form of communication. Two-way forms of communication give families opportunities to collaborate with you and to actually talk about their concerns, wants, goals, and dreams. In addition, keep them informed about upcoming plans or changes, with sufficient time to consider their options and preferences, to ask questions, and to communicate with you. As stated in NAEYC’s position statement on advancing equity, educators should “uphold every family’s right to make decisions for and with their children.”
  • Consider culture, language, and literacy when communicating with families.This means knowing about the families and ensuring that accommodations are made so that every family can access and respond to the information you share. Translate documents into families’ home languages and use interpreters to help strengthen the two-way engagement and communication between you and families.

Families Want Teachers to Reflect

True reflection is ongoing and an essential part of assessment and teaching. Reflecting helps teachers engage children and families intentionally instead of falling into routines. You may find it most useful to reflect daily or weekly (such as taking an extra 10 minutes before you write your weekly update for families). As long as you find time to reflect while your memories are still fresh, you’ll have new insights that will positively impact your instruction and your interactions with each child and their family.

Here are strategies you can utilize to promote reflection:

  • Ask yourself:How well do I know each of the children and their families, and how can I learn more about them? How often do I interact with each family? What strategies do I use to ensure they know they are an important part of the learning community?
  • Ask family members:How would you like to be involved in the classroom? Is there a book you would like to read to the class, a cultural tradition you would like to share, or an activity related to your job or a hobby (like bird watching) you would like to lead? What do you think your child needs to have an even more enjoyable and educational experience in the classroom?
  • Ask your colleagues:How do you engage families? Is there something we should do together—like host a family science and art night—to get to know family members better and show ways to extend learning at home?

Conclusion

At its best, early childhood is a time when teachers, children, and families open themselves to each other, inviting joyful play, collaborative inquiry, thoughtful observation, and deep caring. Together, families and early childhood educators nurture positive social, emotional, and intellectual development.

One More R: Sharing Resources with Families

By using the five Rs, educators can build trust and foster positive family engagement. Families will know that you have their child’s best interests in mind, and they may want to learn about resources they can use at home. Here are strategies you can use for sharing resources:

  • Include family-friendly resources on your website or family communication app and bulletin board. Free events, concerts, educational websites, local places of interest, book fairs, and more are examples of valuable resources for all families. In addition, list (and regularly update) support services and organizations, like food banks, the local United Way office locations, and clinics offering free dental care, eyeglasses, and flu shots.
  • Create a monthly Family Fun calendar. To support playful learning at home, you could create a monthly calendar with suggested activities that may be completed by families to supplement their child’s classroom learning. Suggest easy-to-use apps along with readily available non-digital materials at home that promote learning and engagement. For example, check out:
    • Rif.org/literacy-central/calendars—This literacy-based website equips educators with interactive calendars. Each day on the calendar provides either information about that day, an activity to complete with an adult, or a question to ponder.
    • Pbskids.org—This interactive website offers resources and tips for families. In addition, the free website includes games and videos.
    • Readingrockets.org—This literacy website provides articles, videos, blogs, and PBS television shows related to reading.
  • Recommend family-oriented magazines. Highlight available magazines and articles related to child development, parenting, or early education during family conferences and back to school night. Also display them on your bulletin board, online communication platform, or in the waiting area during family conferences. Many have free subscriptions: Family Magazine, Family Fun Magazine, Working Mother, and Highlights.

Photograph: © Getty Images.
Copyright © 2022 by the National Association for the Education of Young Children. See permissions and reprints online atNAEYC.org/resources/permissions.

Five Rs for Promoting Positive Family Engagement (2024)

FAQs

Five Rs for Promoting Positive Family Engagement? ›

I offer five Rs—respect, responsiveness and reassurance, relationship, reciprocity, and reflection—to help you build trust and promote positive family engagement in your preschool classroom.

What are the 5 R's of family engagement? ›

Be able to use the 5Rs framework—reach out, raise up, reinforce, relate, and reimagine—to guide and organize their work with families; and. Have new ideas to apply to family engagement efforts in early childhood programs, schools, afterschool programs, and libraries.

What are 6 factors of family engagement? ›

Six Types of Family Involvement Every School Should Consider
  • Parenting. The first way parents can support their children's education is by providing a healthy home environment. ...
  • Communicating. ...
  • Volunteering. ...
  • Learning at Home. ...
  • Decision-Making. ...
  • Collaborating With the Community. ...
  • How Can You Learn More About Education?

What are the goals for promoting family engagement? ›

The goal of parent and family engagement is to build strong and effective partnerships with families that can help children and families thrive. These partnerships are grounded in positive, ongoing, and goal-oriented relationships with families.

What are the 5 five essential roles for effective family functioning? ›

Societies around the world rely on the family to perform certain functions. The basic functions of the family are to: (1) regulate sexual access and activity; (2) provide an orderly context for procreation; (3) nurture and socialize children; (4) ensure economic stability; and (5) ascribe social status.

What are the 5 C's to a happy family? ›

Let's take a brief look at each 'C' and how you can intentionally and proactively help your child to develop each.
  • Commitment. ...
  • Communication. ...
  • Concentration. ...
  • Control. ...
  • Confidence.
Oct 19, 2021

What are examples of family engagement? ›

Examples of traditional forms of engagement and parent roles include checking homework, attending parent-teacher conferences, and volunteering in the classroom.

What is a family engagement? ›

Family engagement means building relationships with families to support family well-being, strong parent-child relationships and the ongoing learning and development of parents and children.

What are the characteristics of effective family engagement? ›

Recognition, respect, and support for families' needs, as well as differences. Strength-based partnership where decisions and responsibility are shared. Activities, interactions, and support increase family involvement in their child's development.

What are the 5 factors of family? ›

The five Strengthening Families Protective Factors are:
  • Parental Resilience.
  • Social Connections.
  • Concrete Support in Times of Need.
  • Knowledge of Parenting and Child Development.
  • Social and Emotional Competence of Children.
Apr 6, 2018

What are 5 factors that influence family life? ›

Significant variables among general characteristics influencing family function were age, sex, marital status, educational levels, monthly income and occupation (p less than . 001).

What are the 6 types of family involvement? ›

  • TYPE 1. PARENTING. Help all families establish home environments to support children as students. ...
  • TYPE 2. COMMUNICATING. ...
  • TYPE 3. VOLUNTEERING. ...
  • TYPE 4. LEARNING AT HOME. ...
  • TYPE 5. DECISION MAKING. ...
  • TYPE 6. COLLABORATING WITH COMMUNTY.

Why is family engagement important? ›

In addition to avoiding health risk behaviors, family engagement can increase participation in positive health behaviors such as school-related physical activity13 and improved educational achievement, including increased attendance14 and higher grades and test scores.

What are family goals examples? ›

Below are typical family goals:
  • To provide financial resources to achieve each member's personal goals.
  • To maintain good health for all family members.
  • To maintain a home of which you are all proud.
  • To have a son or daughter join the family business.
  • To enjoy leisure time as a family.

What are the three importance of family goals? ›

Family goal setting benefits children by allowing them to achieve success by seeing their goal from beginning to end; provides individual focus, direction, and purpose; helps them to feel important and listened to, and your children will use the values they learn to develop an inner compass.

What are the five family impact principles? ›

The Family Impact Checklist is based on five guiding principles (family responsibility, family stability, family relationships, family diversity, and family engagement) developed by the Coalition of Family Health Organizations for use in “applying the family impact lens in policy and programs and also to practice” (26) ...

What are the 5 roles? ›

The five psychological role people gravitate towards on the team are: Results, relationships, process, innovation and pragmatism. Results. These people tend to want to manage the team, are ambitious, results oriented and want to win. Relationships.

What are the 4 basic needs of the family? ›

Every family needs certain things such as food, shelter, clothes, education and health services, etc. which are considered as the basic needs. All the family members are satisfied if all this things are provided to them. With the increase in the size of the family, the quantities of these things have to be increased.

What are five traits of a healthy family? ›

There are several common features of healthy, happy families that include cohesiveness, open communication, parents leading by example, conflict management, and setting clear expectations and limits. Healthy families stick together.

What do the 5 C's stand for? ›

What are the 5 Cs of credit? Lenders score your loan application by these 5 Cs—Capacity, Capital, Collateral, Conditions and Character. Learn what they are so you can improve your eligibility when you present yourself to lenders. Capacity.

What is the 5 C's approach? ›

The five C's stand for Company, Customers, Collaborators, Competitors, and Climate.

What are the two levels of family engagement? ›

Meaningful family engagement is about improving outcomes for all youth and families and happens at the system level and at the service level.

What 2 qualities are most important in family stability? ›

Warmth, care and positive attention in strong families

Being warm, caring and affectionate with your child helps to build strong family relationships. Positive attention is also important for building strong relationships in your family.

How do you build positive relationships with families? ›

Build Relationships with Families
  1. Communicate with families often. ...
  2. Communicate the positive and the negative. ...
  3. Foster two-way communication. ...
  4. Use multiple modes communication. ...
  5. Understand each family's expectations and views about their involvement. ...
  6. Approach the relationship with respect.

What are 3 characteristics of strong families? ›

What makes a family strong?
  • Commitment: They make their relationships a high priority. ...
  • Appreciation: They let other family know, daily, they were appreciated. ...
  • Communication: They talk to each other about big issues as well as small issues. ...
  • Time together: They are deliberate about planning activities.
Dec 2, 2016

What are the 5 influencing factors? ›

These factors are namely Psychological, Social, Cultural, Personal, and Economic factors.

What are the four essential elements that makes a stronger family relationship? ›

Top 4 Elements of Strong Family Relationships
  • Mutual Respect. A lack of respect creates problems in any relationship. ...
  • Time for Fun. Quality time is another key ingredient to building a healthy, happy relationship. ...
  • Constant Encouragement. ...
  • Communicated love.

What are the 3 basic needs of all family members? ›

When families are able to meet basic needs such as food, housing, and medical care, parents and other caregivers experience less stress, which allows them to provide the critical support that children need to grow into healthy, productive adults.

What are the 4 aspects of family functioning? ›

Family functioning is defined as the frequency of normal family routines, effectiveness of family communication and problem solving, family cohesiveness, and how well family members get along.

What are the six major qualities of a strong or healthy family? ›

Six traits of strong families
  • Strong families express appreciation and affection. ...
  • Strong families have a strong commitment to each other. ...
  • Strong families spend enjoyable time together. ...
  • Strong families manage stress and crisis effectively. ...
  • Strong families have a sense of spiritual well-being.
Nov 20, 2018

What are the three steps to planning a strong parent engagement process? ›

There are three essential aspects of parent engagement — connect, engage and sustain. Using your Pledge is the critical step that moves the compact from planning to action, from paper to partnership with parents. First, people need to know about the Parent Engagement Pledge--what it is and how they can get involved.

What are the 5 smart goals? ›

Setting specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, and time-bound (SMART) objectives is a good way to plan the steps to meet the long-term goals in your grant. It helps you take your grant from ideas to action.

What is one smart goal for family? ›

Learn Something New Together as a Family

One family goal that can be both fun and beneficial is learning something new together. It could be a new skill, hobby, or activity that everyone in the family learns and enjoys. Spending time together while doing something constructive is always a good idea.

What is the most important purpose of a family? ›

Family is important because they can offer support and security coupled with unconditional love; they will always look to see and bring out the best in you even if you cannot see it for yourself.

What are the 4 C's of creative family engagement? ›

Distilled down to the four Cs -- creativity, collaboration, communication, and critical thinking -- these are essential tools students must cultivate to thrive in the complex, challenge-riddled contemporary world.

What are the 4 R's of parenting? ›

In a great book, Positive Discipline, author Jane Nelsen offers guidelines for using consequences, which she calls the Four R's of consequences: reveal, related, respectful and reasonable.

What are the five major components of helping families prepare for reunification? ›

  • Respect Birth Parents and Be Compassionate.
  • Encourage Visitation and Regular Contact.
  • Communicate Regularly with the Family.
  • Pursue Safe Reunification for Children.
  • Promote Cooperative Reunification-Centered Approaches at Agencies.
Oct 1, 2017

What are the three R's for parents? ›

When we're in these moments, as parents, how do we navigate them and how do we teach our children how to navigate them? Bruce Perry a world-renowned psychiatrist and head of the child trauma academy gives us a great thing called the “Three R's” he talks about first you regulate, then you relate, then you reason.

What is the family engagement model? ›

Family engagement is an interactive process through which program staff and families, family members, and their children build positive and goal-oriented relationships. It is a shared responsibility of families and professionals that requires mutual respect for the roles and strengths each has to offer.

What are the characteristics of family engagement? ›

Key Features of Family Engagement

Equity – which may be be described as the elimination of privilege, oppression, disparities, and disadvantage. Inclusiveness – every childtruly is included and the individual needs of each child are considered and valued.

What are the four R's for? ›

One easy way to make sure that the eco-trend continues is to always remember the 4Rs. In this order of priority, remember to refuse, reduce, reuse and recycle.

What are the 4 R's in early childhood education? ›

Respect, resilience, responsibility and reasoning are the four critical skills required to create a safer and more positive online environment for everyone.

What are the three R's in child development? ›

Research shows three important processes shape young children's development and early learning. We refer to these processes as the 3R's of Early Learning: Relationships, Repetition, Routines ™. These processes are important because they focus on how children learn in addition to what they learn.

What are four responsibilities of families? ›

Caring for your children. Supervising a younger sibling. Regularly assisting a grandparent or older adult relative. Routinely taking care of household tasks like cooking, cleaning, and running errands.

What are the three R's of positive relationships? ›

Basically it comes down to three important things — resilience, respect, and responsiveness. Showing respect is one of the most powerful, loving things a couple can do in their marriage. Remember the childhood expression “Sticks and stones will break my bones but names will never harm me.” Well, that's a myth.

Which of the three R's is most important? ›

Reducing is the most effective of the three R's. The second most effective strategy for environmental stewardship is to reuse. Before throwing something in the garbage, it helps to think about how that item might be reused.

What are the three R's stand for? ›

The 3R Initiative aims to promote the "3Rs" (reduce, reuse and recycle) globally so as to build a sound-material-cycle society through the effective use of resources and materials.

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