Parent Involvement and Student Achievement
Parental Involvement and Student Academic Achievement
TA administration and staff believe schools are seeing a decrease in parental involvement as students enter high school. Research conducted by the Kentucky Department of Education (KDE) Dropout Prevention Resource Guide (2008) has demonstrated the positive effects of parental involvement in schools.
Parental involvement in the eighth grade had a strong positive effect on the grade point average of 10th graders (Keith, T.Z., Keith, Quirk, Sperduto, Santillo, & Killings, 1998). In contrast, Balen and Moles (1994) and Hurst (2002) suggest when parents have a positive attitude regarding education and demonstrate trust that their children can do well, children perform better in school. However, parental involvement tends to decrease as students become older (p. 3).
Problem Statement
Historical and current studies have investigated the impact of parental involvement and student achievement. Diverse studies have considered how well students perform academically when their parents are involved in their educational process compared to students whose parents are not involved. Sartor and Youniss (2002), in their study about the relationship between positive parental involvement and identity achievement during adolescence, found high parental awareness of adolescent behaviour and parental support would be positively associated with identity achievement. Barber's (1997) study lends support in that the author suggests a theoretical foundation for comprehending the relationship between parenting and adolescent identity development. Furthermore, Barber believes in healthy parent-adolescent relationships; parents provide structure with enough flexibility that adolescents can securely engage in identity exploration.
Of interest to this researcher; however, is a little different than just the direct relationship between student achievement/success and parental involvement as the research seems abundant enough already, but instead an interest in the relationship between parental involvement and the more subjective essence of adolescent aspirations regarding adulthood and the mechanisms of influence that these aspirations have on a student's fight in the future with success.
Wong, Wiest, and Cusick (2002), Eccles and Midgley (1990), Paterson, Field, and Pryer (1994) suggest adolescents' secure parental attachment may allow them to achieve a sense of academic competence, as well as actual school achievement, by providing them with a secure...
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