Inclusion

Engaging Parents and Capturing Success

Supporting parents and carers to engage in their child’s learning is an important part of providing a rounded education for children. This Child File develops your thinking around parent engagement, and through the reflection at the end, it helps you to consider your current practice in this area and how you could do it better.

Thorney Close Primary, Sunderland: Engaging parents and carers

Context

Thorney Close primary school has 263 pupils on roll, with a higher than average proportion of pupils on SEN Support (16%) and also those eligible for FSM in the last six years (46%).  It was rated good at its last Ofsted inspection in 2018.

Two target groups of 11 pupils were identified within Key Stage 1 and Key Stage 2. Of these pupils, 73% were entitled to Pupil Premium and 32% were on SEN Support. The need to engage parents in supporting their children’s learning was a key factor

The school already worked hard to get parents to attend events such as summer parties or school productions, but when the focus was on learning, they were less successful. A core of parents did not turn up for parents’ evenings. 

Approach

The school introduced structured conversations through their work with Achievement for All. The school focused the meetings on how well the child was doing and what the parents’ hopes were for their children. They identified a need for greater flexibility in offering times for appointments. A personal invitation from the class teacher was followed by phone calls, and catching them in the playground to arrange an appointment that would suit the family. In one case, a teacher had to make five different appointments with the parents before eventually succeeding in getting them there. The longer meeting time of at least twenty minutes meant that parents and carers felt their viewpoint was valued. 

It became clear that children needed more support to understand what they had to do to move forward in their learning.  Parents and carers were involved in short-term targets, and the school developed a visual tool using RAG ratings to demonstrate measures such as attendance, punctuality and progress by subject to show how much progress their child was making. Although parents and carers valued their child’s happiness and confidence, academic attainment was a low priority. The SLT decided to raise the profile of attainment and launched the ‘We Are Proud’ celebration. 

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