Why is it important; What is it; Can we improve it?
Presented by,
Dr. Catherine Wade, Principal Research Specialist & Psychologist Parenting Research Centre & University of Sydney
1. Parent Engagement in ECEC
Why is it important; What is it; Can we improve it?
Dr. Catherine Wade
Principal Research Specialist & Psychologist
Parenting Research Centre & University of Sydney
Paper presented at the Queensland Early Education and Care Conference June 2016, Brisbane.
5. Acknowledgements
Parenting Research Centre: Dr Gina-Maree Sartore,
Dr Michelle Macvean, Dr Catherine Wade, Derek
McCormack, Dr Arno Parolini, Faye Forbes, Tracey
Phan, Durga Shrestha, Anastasia Pourliakas, Ben
Devine, Cathy Bent, Jessica Falkiner, Dr Robyn Mildon,
Dr Erica Neill, Tracey Phan, Durga Shrestha, Faye
Forbes, Fiona Shackleton, Catherine Murphy, Melinda
Polimeni, Cathy Bent, Tony Gates, Warren Cann…
Centre for Community Child Health: Maria Fong
Australian Research Alliance for Children and Youth
(ARACY): Neil Stafford & Dr Stacey Fox
6. Bronfenbrenner’s socioecological model
of influences on the child
Adapted from Siegler, R., Deloache,
J., & Eisenberg, N. (2006). How
Children Develop (2nd ed.) . New
York, NY: Catherine Woods.
Available at:
https://lifeinstructionmanual.wikisp
aces.com/References+Page
7. The science shows the ingredients of
a healthy childhood are consistent.
The most important magic ingredient
is the quality and stability of the
relationships that children have with
the adults in their lives.
Jack Shonkoff, The Age, 3 March 2006
8. Growing up in Scotland: Cohort of 5,217 children
“While other family factors such as parents’ education
and socio-economic status are also important, the extent
of home learning activities exerts a greater and
independent influence on children’s cognitive
development at three years of age”
Melhuish, 2010 , p.19
9.
10. Your confidence
Do you, personally feel very or extremely confident at...
Talking with families about children’s success & achievements
Sharing info about a child’s learning and progress
Responding to a family’s request for info or advice regarding their child
Communicating with families about their priorities and concerns when setting
goals for their child
Sharing info about child development or behaviour
Encouraging families to be involved in the activities at the service/centre
Greeting families by name
Responding to a families concerns or complains
Communicating with a family from a different culture
_ /9
11. 89
81
76
71
70
69
69
67
52
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Talk with families about children’s success and
achievements
Share information about a child's learning and
progress
Respond to a family's request for information or
advice regarding their child
Communication with families about their priorities
and concerns when setting goals for their child
Share information about child development or
behaviour
Encourage families to be involved in the activities
at the service/centre
Greet families by name
Respond to a family’s concerns or complaints
Communication with a family from a different
culture
% of educators reporting 'very' or 'extremely' confident
12. Assessing the evidence
Rating categories
Strong At least two randomised controlled trials (RCTs) AND two meta-
analyses or systematic reviews have found the action or behaviour
improves learning or development outcomes for children or young
people.
Good At least two RCTs OR two meta-analyses or systematic reviews have
found the action or behaviour improves learning or developmental
outcomes for children or young people.
Emerging One RCT or several longitudinal prospective studies or quasi-
experimental studies or a meta-analysis or systematic review has
found the action or behaviour improves learning or developmental
outcomes for children or young people.
Pending Actions and behaviours that do not meet the above criteria. For
example, a single group pre–post design study with no comparison
group found improvements in child outcomes; or some studies
demonstrate some gains for child outcomes, but other studies show
no benefit.
13. Strong Evidence
= evidence of positive outcomes; - = no evidence; S = strong evidence of positive outcomes; G =
good evidence of positive outcomes; E = emerging evidence of positive outcomes; P = pending
evidence of positive outcomes
Parent action or behaviour
Literacy Numeracy Young
children
Older
children
Positive parental interactions and
home environment
S G
Reading with the child using rich
explanations, discussion and dialogic
strategies
- S P
15. Good Evidence
= evidence of positive outcomes; - = no evidence; S = strong evidence of positive outcomes; G =
good evidence of positive outcomes; E = emerging evidence of positive outcomes; P = pending
evidence of positive outcomes
Parent action or behaviour
Literacy Numeracy Young
children
Older
children
Having aspirations or expectations
for the child’s education
P G
Reading to the child G E
Being involved with the child’s
school
G G
Tutoring child in literacy activities - G P
16. Emerging Evidence
* May be childcare in the home or in a formal service setting
Parent action or behaviour
Literacy Numeracy Young
children
Older
children
Communicating with the child about
school
- E
Tutoring the child in maths exercises
and basic numerical skills
- E E
Ensuring childcare is of a high quality - - P P
Using gestures to complement speech - - E -
Authoritative/democratic parenting
styles
- - - E
High-quality childcare* - - P P
Adequate sleep routines and duration - - E P
Negative parenting did not result in
good outcomes for children
- - P P
17. Parents of preschool children...
65% of parents play music to or sing songs with
their child every day
57% play with their child in the bath every day
More than 94% play games like finger puppets and
peek-a-boo, or used other indoor toys, at least
once a week
(sources: EHLS and smalltalk data)
18. Frequency of family members reading a book to children aged 0–12 years, VCHWS, 2013
19.
20. Barriers to Parent Engagement
Databases:
• SES
Low parent education
Maternal unemployment
Parent mental health
Cultural background
Focus Groups:
• Time
Inflexible work places
Work commitments
Other siblings
Extra child activities
Lack of knowledge about
how
21. The National
Quality Framework
(1) educational program and practice
(2) children’s health and safety
(3) physical environment
(4) staffing arrangements
(5) relationships with children
(6) collaborative partnerships with families and
communities
(7) leadership and service management
22. Consultations – What works?
18 peak ECEC agencies
6 peak community organisations (SNAICC, COPMI,
Noahs Ark)
4 ECEC educator focus groups
3 parent focus groups
265 parents via online survey
318 ECEC educators via online survey
23. 89
81
76
71
70
69
69
67
52
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Talk with families about children’s success and
achievements
Share information about a child's learning and
progress
Respond to a family's request for information or
advice regarding their child
Communication with families about their priorities
and concerns when setting goals for their child
Share information about child development or
behaviour
Encourage families to be involved in the activities
at the service/centre
Greet families by name
Respond to a family’s concerns or complaints
Communication with a family from a different
culture
% of educators reporting 'very' or 'extremely' confident
25. The process of behaviour change
Knowledge &
awareness
Beliefs Attitudes
Behavioural
intentions
Behaviour
Efficacy
Legitimacy
Morality
Costs& benefits
Social & cultural norms
Habit
Heuristics
Context/ setting
REFLECTIVE
AUTOMATIC
* Model adapted from TNS Social Research in ARACY (2012).
33. Your confidence
Do you, personally feel very or extremely confident at...
Talking with families about children’s success & achievements
Sharing info about a child’s learning and progress
Responding to a family’s request for info or advice regarding their child
Communicating with families about their priorities and concerns when setting
goals for their child
Sharing info about child development or behaviour
Encouraging families to be involved in the activities at the service/centre
Greeting families by name
Responding to a families concerns or complains
Communicating with a family from a different culture
_ /9