Date Published: Jul 31, 2014
Source: 
University of Miami dissertation, UMI 3634668
Authors: 
Blatz, E.

[Abstract]

"Parent involvement is recognized as an important factor in the education of all students, including those receiving special education services. Research indicates that parents of students with disabilities often experience barriers to their participation in their children’s education, and that the efforts put forth by school personnel to engage these parents may be insufficient or ineffective. Using data collected as part of a larger study of parents’ and professionals’ perceptions related to schools’ parent engagement efforts, this study compared the perspectives of 25 parents of students with disabilities and 26 teachers and administrators from five middle schools located in four different school districts in a large southeastern state. The analysis of data aggregated across participants from all five schools yielded four themes, identified as (a) the quality of the school’s efforts to engage and collaborate with parents, (b) the frequency, variety, and effectiveness of communication, (c) the quality of services, placement, and education, and (d) beliefs and values about parent involvement. When parents and professionals from each school were considered as separate units of analysis, important differences emerged across schools. In one school, there was a high level of agreement between parents and professionals in relation to all four themes; in the other four schools, the perspectives of parents were consistently different from the perspectives of school personnel. The findings of this study add significantly to the literature on parent-school collaboration and highlight important school-level variation in the degree of congruence between parents and school staff. Insights gained from the study can inform middle schools’ future efforts to develop more effective educational partnerships with parents of students receiving special education services."

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