Authors
Patricia Baquedano-López, Rebecca Anne Alexander, Sera J Hernandez
Publication date
2013/3
Source
Review of research in education
Volume
37
Issue
1
Pages
149-182
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Description
In this chapter, we examine the literature on parental involvement highlighting the equity issues that it raises in educational practice. Like so many educators and researchers, we are concerned with approaches to parental involvement that construct restricted roles for parents in the education of their children. These approaches often miss the multiple ways nondominant parents participate in their children’s education because they do not correspond to normative understandings of parental involvement in schools (Barton, Drake, Perez, St. Louis, & George, 2004). Moreover, these framings restrict the ways in which parents from nondominant backgrounds can be productive social actors who can shape and influence schools and other social institutions. A great deal of general educational policy on parent involvement draws on Epstein’s (1992, 1995) theory and typologies where a set of overlapping spheres of …
Total citations
20132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202461934546491819810211011556
Scholar articles