Building on the Hopes and Dreams of Latino Families with Young Children: Findings from Family Member Focus Groups

In the past, Latino families were often regarded as being uninvolved in their child’s education, particularly within the parent involvement literature. More recently, authors are encouraging educational professionals to look at a family’s “funds of knowledge” to encourage their involvement. This exp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Early childhood education journal 2012-04, Vol.40 (2), p.87-96
Hauptverfasser: Gregg, Katy, Rugg, Mary, Stoneman, Zolinda
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Stoneman, Zolinda
description In the past, Latino families were often regarded as being uninvolved in their child’s education, particularly within the parent involvement literature. More recently, authors are encouraging educational professionals to look at a family’s “funds of knowledge” to encourage their involvement. This expression takes into account the knowledge a teacher can gain from a family and child, including awareness of culture, familial background, and other contributions the family can add to the child’s education. This article reviews findings from the analyses of focus groups conducted with Latino family members who have a child(ren) enrolled at a Head Start Center. Findings indicate that Latino families openly communicated strengths, interests, aspirations and learning opportunities for their child and family yet often faced barriers in conveying these to teachers and other staff in their child’s life. Implications for using inquiry-based approaches to bridge this gap in family-school communication are discussed.
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source Education Source; Springer Nature - Complete Springer Journals
subjects Academic Achievement
Active Learning
Disadvantaged Youth
Early Childhood Education
Early Intervention
Education
Family (Sociological Unit)
Family Relationship
Federal Programs
Focus Groups
Head Start project
Hispanic Americans
Hispanic people
Holistic Approach
Inquiry
Learning and Instruction
Low Income
Parent educational background
Parent Participation
Parent School Relationship
Preschool Children
School Readiness
Sociology
Sociology of Education
Student Experience
Teaching Methods
Young Children
title Building on the Hopes and Dreams of Latino Families with Young Children: Findings from Family Member Focus Groups
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