Obstacles to parental involvement in children's education

New teachers' perceptions and strategies

Authors

  • Qinghua Liu Beijing Institute of Fashion Technology
  • Minghui Gao Arkansas State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31686/ijier.vol10.iss2.3659

Keywords:

parental involvement, obstacles, new teachers, perceptions, Strategies

Abstract

This study explored new teachers’ perceptions of, and strategies for overcoming the obstacles to parental involvement in children’s education. 30 elementary school teachers with 1 to 5 years’ teaching experience were interviewed. Data were first coded through the grounded theory approach and then analyzed by case and cross case. As found out, obstacles to parental involvement were related to parents’ lack of cognitive readiness, affective preparedness, and physical resources. Strategies new teachers employed to overcome their perceived obstacles included cognitively informing, persistently outreaching, psychologically disarming or comforting, and consciously attending to parents’ individual differences, needs, or personal preferences. Lessons learned from this study will inform both in-service teachers’ efforts to engage parents for optimal student learning outcomes and teacher educators’ endeavors to prepare prospective teachers for more effective teacher-parent communication.

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Author Biographies

  • Qinghua Liu, Beijing Institute of Fashion Technology

    School of Arts and Sciences

  • Minghui Gao, Arkansas State University

    Department of Teacher Education

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Published

2022-02-01

How to Cite

Liu, Q., & Gao, M. (2022). Obstacles to parental involvement in children’s education: New teachers’ perceptions and strategies. International Journal for Innovation Education and Research, 10(2), 139-148. https://doi.org/10.31686/ijier.vol10.iss2.3659
Received 2022-01-10
Accepted 2022-01-27
Published 2022-02-01