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Examining the Influence of the Urban Environment on Parent's Time, Energy, and Resources for Engagement in their Children's Learning.

机译:考察城市环境对父母的时间,精力和资源参与孩子学习的影响。

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摘要

Decades of research have shown that parents play a critical role in their children's education and learning, particularly if they engage with their children's education at home, get involved in their children's schools, and involve their children in community-based activities and programs that provide additional types of learning and socialization. However, research has also identified that barriers in the urban environment often prevent parents from being more fully engaged, including barriers related to transportation, housing, and neighborhood safety. These urban environmental barriers are rarely mentioned in the current school reform debates, nor are there detailed analyses of how actual environmental issues present barriers to parents. This dissertation fills this gap by examining how the urban environment affects parents' time, energy, and resources for engagement in their children's learning.;Parent engagement is influenced by the parent's personal characteristics, beliefs, and capabilities, which provide the motivation and skills for engagement. Given the decision to engage, time and resource constraints imposed by family demands, employment, or the external environment affect whether the parent can pursue opportunities for engagement. The school environment, culture, or programs for parents may determine whether a parent feels comfortable getting involved and has information on how to be involved. Community and social supports may also encourage engagement by helping parents to meet their basic needs, thereby increasing time and resources for engagement, or by providing education and training, or emotional and social ties that affect their motivation to be engaged.;In order to account for each of the various influences on parent engagement, a mixed-methods case study approach was used to assess environmental contexts as well as personal influences. Parents in 70 families residing in low- and mixed-income neighborhoods of Oakland, CA completed a take-home survey and a two-day time use diary, and were interviewed in person. The data collected covered personal background, education, household expenditures, housing history and residential location choices, current and past employment, daily activities and transportation patterns, engagement activities with their children, satisfaction with the school, and future plans for themselves and their children. The semi-structured interviews allowed for in-depth explanations about how engagement fit with the rest of their responsibilities and what types of supports allowed them to engage, or prevented them from engaging more.;The study approach brought together research on parent engagement with research on activity spaces, accessibility, and time budgets, and added detailed neighborhood conditions data and travel data on trips, distances, and modes. Statistical analyses of the data were complemented with in-depth qualitative information from the parent interviews.;From the statistical time-use analysis, the study confirmed that parent engagement is influenced by a mix of personal, external and school factors. At the personal level, there were significant and positive associations with at-home learning and at-school involvement by income, and at-home learning by employment. Parents with longer work hours reduced their time on sleep, personal care, and leisure to allow for parental engagement. Car ownership was negatively associated with time spent on care and organizing for children, but there was no association with at-home learning or school involvement. Parents whose children attended a neighborhood school spent more time on care and organizing for their children, and if the school was less than 1.3 miles from home, they spent more time on school involvement and care and organizing. The age of children also mattered, as expected, with parents of younger children spending more time on engagement activities at home, such as reading with their children. In contrast to other studies, there was no association by education level or race and ethnicity in terms of time spent on parent engagement, although there were differences by other daily time uses, mostly related to fewer work hours.;The qualitative analysis helped to define the mechanisms behind these associations. In particular, low household incomes led to high housing mobility, and the associated time and costs cut into parents' time for engagement, job searches, and personal development. School choice was also a major factor that interacted with income. Low income parents who chose schools distant from home to improve their children's academic opportunities had trouble affording the time, costs, and logistics of traveling to school and other destinations, due to slow and unreliable transit and the high costs of gasoline. Traveling after dark was also a barrier for families who lived in high crime areas. In contrast, neighborhood community development and involvement in community organizations or with social service providers provided positive supports for parents of all income levels. Active participation in a community organization that provided a variety of training programs for low-income mothers helped to explain why parents with less than a high school education were actively engaged with their children's learning.;Improving student outcomes in the U.S. requires not only providing excellent in-school resources, but also removing the barriers and providing the additional supports that parents need to manage their multiple roles including their important role as educators of their children. Using a lens of parent engagement together with one of urban planning and policy has been shown to provide new insights into the roles planners can play in helping to improve education. If parents' daily needs for travel, housing and social supports are not met, they cannot meet their children's educational needs. Planners who design and seek to improve transit service, increase the supply of affordable housing in safe and accessible neighborhoods, and provide for community development thus can help improve parental involvement.
机译:数十年的研究表明,父母在子女的教育和学习中起着至关重要的作用,尤其是当父母在家中从事子女的教育,参与子女的学校教育并让子女参与社区活动和计划时,这些活动和计划将提供额外的帮助学习和社会化的类型。但是,研究还发现,城市环境中的障碍通常会阻止父母更加充分地参与其中,其中包括与交通,住房和邻里安全相关的障碍。在当前的学校改革辩论中很少提及这些城市环境障碍,也没有详细分析实际的环境问题如何给父母带来障碍。本论文通过研究城市环境如何影响父母参与孩子学习的时间,精力和资源来填补这一空白。父母的参与受父母的个人特征,信念和能力的影响,为父母的学习提供了动力和技能。订婚。在决定交往后,家庭需求,就业或外部环境所施加的时间和资源限制会影响父母是否可以寻求交往机会。父母的学校环境,文化或计划可能会确定父母是否对融入社会感到自在,并拥有有关如何参与的信息。社区和社会支持还可以通过帮助父母满足其基本需求来鼓励参与,从而增加参与的时间和资源,或者通过提供教育和培训或影响其参与动机的情感和社会纽带来鼓励参与。对于影响父母交往的各种影响,我们采用了一种混合方法案例研究方法来评估环境状况以及个人影响。居住在加利福尼亚州奥克兰低收入和混合收入社区的70个家庭的父母完成了一项家庭调查和两天时间使用日记,并接受了亲自采访。收集的数据涵盖个人背景,教育,家庭支出,住房历史和居住地点选择,当前和过去的工作,日常活动和交通方式,与孩子的互动活动,对学校的满意度以及对自己和孩子的未来计划。半结构化访谈允许深入地解释订婚如何与他们的其他职责相适应,以及什么样的支持使他们能够参与或阻止他们更多地参与。研究方法将父母参与的研究与研究结合在一起有关活动空间,可及性和时间预算的信息,并添加了有关旅行,距离和方式的详细邻里条件数据和旅行数据。数据的统计分析得到了父母访谈的深入定性信息的补充。从统计时间使用分析中,研究证实了父母的参与受个人,外部和学校因素的综合影响。在个人层面,与家庭学习和学校参与(按收入)以及在家学习(与就业)之间存在显着且积极的联系。工作时间较长的父母减少了他们的睡眠,个人护理和休闲时间,以便父母参与。拥有汽车与花费在照顾孩子和组织儿童上的时间成负相关,但与在家学习或学校参与无关。父母的孩子上了邻里学校,他们的父母花了更多的时间在照料和组织上,如果学校距离家不到1.3英里,他们会花更多的时间在学校参与,照料和组织上。正如预期的那样,孩子的年龄也很重要,年幼的孩子的父母将更多的时间花在家里的参与活动上,例如与孩子一起阅读。与其他研究相比,尽管其他日常时间使用存在差异,但主要与工作时间减少有关,尽管在父母参与上花费的时间在教育水平,种族和种族方面没有关联;定性分析有助于确定这些协会背后的机制。特别是家庭收入低导致住房流动性高,相关的时间和成本削减了父母的交往时间,工作寻找时间和个人发展时间。择校也是与收入互动的主要因素。低收入父母选择离家较远的学校来改善子女的学业机会,原因是交通缓慢,不可靠以及汽油成本高昂,无法负担去学校和其他目的地的时间,成本和后勤费用。天黑后旅行也是高犯罪率地区家庭的障碍。相反,社区发展以及社区组织或社会服务提供商的参与为所有收入水平的父母提供了积极的支持。积极参与为低收入母亲提供各种培训计划的社区组织有助于解释为什么受过中学以上教育的父母积极地参与子女的学习。;在美国,要提高学生的学习成绩,不仅需要提供出色的教育,校内资源,但也消除了障碍,并提供了家长管理其多种角色所需的其他支持,包括他们作为子女教育者的重要角色。研究表明,结合家长参与的视角以及城市规划和政策之一,可以提供新的见解,帮助规划人员在帮助改善教育方面发挥作用。如果父母的日常旅行,住房和社会支持需求得不到满足,他们将无法满足子女的教育需求。规划者设计和寻求改善过境服务,增加安全和可访问的社区中负担得起的住房的供应,并促进社区发展,因此可以帮助父母参与。

著录项

  • 作者

    Makarewicz, Carrie.;

  • 作者单位

    University of California, Berkeley.;

  • 授予单位 University of California, Berkeley.;
  • 学科 Urban and Regional Planning.;Education Sociology of.;Transportation.;Sociology Individual and Family Studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2013
  • 页码 309 p.
  • 总页数 309
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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