Family/Parent Engagement Frameworks

 

Newsletters

Newsletters for LEAs

Fall 2025 LEA Newsletter for Parent and Family Engagement

Family Engagement Program Strategies 

Newsletters for Parents

First Annual Family Engagement Newsletter Volume 1 Fall 2025

Parent Portal Introduction Flyer September 2025

Parent Portal Introduction Flyer September 2025 Spanish

 

Current Data

Why Family Engagement Is a Proven Multiplier for Student Success

1 Family involvement consistently boosts academic achievement.

  • A landmark meta-analysis of 52 studies found that students with involved families performed significantly better in school across all grade levels.
  • On average, these students earned higher grades and test scores, enrolled in more advanced programs, and were more likely to graduate. (Fan & Chen, 2001; Hill & Tyson, 2009; Jeynes, 2005)

2 Attendance improves when families are part of the equation.

  • Schools with strong family-school partnerships see measurable gains in attendance and reductions in chronic absenteeism.
  • Research from Johns Hopkins University found that consistent family engagement reduced chronic absenteeism by 10–15% in many districts. (Sheldon, 2007; Sheldon & Epstein, 2004, The Journal of Educational Research)

3 The type of engagement matters more than the amount.

  • Parents who set expectations, discuss learning goals, and maintain open communication about education have a greater impact on achievement than those who only volunteer or check homework.
  • “Academic socialization” — linking home conversations to future goals — produces the strongest academic gains. (Hill & Tyson, 2009, Developmental Psychology)

4 Family engagement narrows achievement gaps.

  • Studies show that active family participation reduces disparities linked to socioeconomic status and ethnicity.
  • In Jeynes’ meta-analysis of over 300,000 students, engaged parents correlated with .25 to .30 standard deviation higher performance — enough to shrink long-standing achievement gaps. (Jeynes, 2007, Urban Education)

5 It’s not just about academics — it changes behavior and confidence.

  • Engaged families foster stronger motivation, better classroom behavior, and greater self-efficacy in students.
  • Children feel more supported and accountable, leading to lasting positive habits that extend beyond school. (Henderson & Mapp, 2002,

 

Takeaway for Districts & Leaders

Family engagement isn’t a “nice to have” — it’s a data-proven growth strategy.

Schools that measure, cultivate, and sustain genuine partnerships with families consistently outperform those that don’t.

-Strategic investment in family engagement yields academic, attendance, and behavioral dividends.

-The research is clear that family partnerships multiply results and create equitable learning opportunities.

(References: Fan & Chen, 2001; Hill & Tyson, 2009; Jeynes, 2005, 2007; Sheldon, 2007; Henderson & Mapp, 2002)

Rvsd. 10/29/25