|
Back to Principal's
Office
Foreward
"What we want to
do is to challenge every principal, every teacher, every parent to have
a written compact to outline their expectations and their
responsibilities for helping every child learn to high standards.
President Clinton
Speech at the Vice President's
Family Reunion Conference
Families and Learning
June 25, 1997
All
across America there are communities pulling together to strengthen
education. Parents, teachers, and community and business leaders, in
every part of our country, are creating compacts to build and strengthen
partnerships for improved student learning.
A compact is (1) a
commitment to sharing responsibility for student learning and (2) an
action plan for a family-school-community partnership to help children in
your school get a high-quality education. This user-friendly handbook is
designed to walk your family-school compact team through the steps of
building a compact. It provides information, strategies, examples, and
checklists to help parents, educators, and community members develop
effective, workable compacts that can improve your school and increase
student achievement. The handbook includes activity sheets to assist your
partners in the creation and use of a compact.
A Compact for
Learning is part of a continuous improvement series that will
highlight key issues of interest to teachers, parents, and principals who
want to make their schools better and work towards standards of
excellence. These materials are available on the U.S. Department of
Education Web site with links to resources, examples, and other school
improvement aids.
This handbook and the
Web site are both works in progress. We welcome your comments and hope
that you will share your experiences with family-school compacts. Please
mail your ideas or a copy of your compact to:
The
Partnership for Family Involvement in Education
600 Independence Avenue SW
Washington, DC 20202-8173
Many of these compacts
and tips will be put on the Partnership Web site, which is available
through the U.S. Department of Education's home page at www.ed.gov/PFIE/.
We look forward to
hearing from you.
Downloaded at http://www.schoolhousedoor.com Previous
Page Next
Page
|