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Geoff Johnson: Parent-teacher interviews often unsatisfying

It鈥檚 that time again and nobody is really comfortable. Tax time? No, it鈥檚 parent-teacher conference time, an experience that one parent likened to speed dating.
It鈥檚 that time again and nobody is really comfortable. Tax time? No, it鈥檚 parent-teacher conference time, an experience that one parent likened to speed dating.

鈥淚鈥檓 sure it鈥檚 strange for the teachers as well,鈥 wrote Brad Sherwin in a Lower Mainland newspaper. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a parade of people who look slightly familiar, especially after being associated with the student鈥檚 name.

鈥淭he thing that is most striking is how much the teachers care about our children鈥檚 education. They are passionate about what they teach, and truly want to see our kids succeed.鈥

Difficult for everybody then, those parent-teacher 鈥渋nterviews,鈥 and not always satisfying 鈥 kind of like appetizers with no dinner to follow.

Despite having spent my career in public education and having sat on both sides of the table as a teacher and a parent, I sometimes wondered why we did it and whether there were not some better alternative.

The research is clear: When parents are involved in their child鈥檚 education, student achievement is higher. And maybe that鈥檚 one reason we hold parent-teacher conferences in the absence of a better system.

Unfortunately, the reality is that teachers typically don鈥檛 get to see the parents whose children would benefit the most from that conversation. Parents whose children are engaged and successful in school often represent the majority of parent-teacher conference attendees.

I always tried to arrive as a well-prepared parent with a list of questions.

My 鈥渙pener鈥 was designed to initiate the conversation in a challenging but non-confrontational way: 鈥淭ell me something about my son that I might have missed out on.鈥

My list always included at least a few of the following:

鈥淲hat area is he best at?鈥

鈥淎re there any areas he finds difficult? If so, what are these specific areas?鈥

鈥淒o you have any suggestions as to what I might do at home to help?鈥

This last one was always a biggie, indicating to the teacher that I knew I had a partnership responsibility. After all, my child was with me 18 hours a day and at school only six hours. So who, after all, had the main part of the responsibility for my child鈥檚 success?

Other things worth knowing for me, and far beyond the minimal information on a report card, were:

Does he participate in class?

How does he relate to others in the class?

How is he with paying attention, following instructions and organizing work or notes?

Is there anything you can tell me about his performance or behaviour that you are concerned about?

Right about then, I would become aware of 20 or 30 other parents waiting in line behind me, with the teacher glancing nervously over my shoulder at Mrs. You-Know-Who, the parent never happy about anything teachers did and who was waiting for the opportunity to unload about last year鈥檚 teachers鈥 union dispute with the government.

Parent-teacher conferences, as the saying goes, are what they are. But there are alternatives being attempted.

A paper presented at the Harvard Family Research Project outlined a path to true parent engagement, rather than participation.

In this system, each parent receives a folder with his or her child鈥檚 data and learns how to interpret assessment data.

Additionally, teachers model reading and math skills, which parents are able to practise before applying them at home. According to this research project, although teachers were at first hesitant to coach parents, they now welcome their new teaching partners.

Positive relationships with parents are a most important aspect of a healthy school culture. Working directly with students is what teachers do best, but parent engagement beyond that 鈥渟peed-dating interview鈥 is what can really make the difference.

Geoff Johnson is a retired superintendent of schools.