Book school, family, and community partnerships: your handbook for action - Compare Prices and buy the Book
Browse main categories
Thud! from Terry Pratchett
KoomValley? That was where the trolls ambushed the dwarfs, or the dwarfs ambushed the trolls. It was far away. It was a long time ago.

But if he doesn’t solve the murder of just one dwarf, Commander Sam Vimes of Ankh-Morpork City Watch is going to see it fought again, right outside his office.
With his beloved Watch crumbling around him and war-drums sounding, he must unravel every clue, outwit every assassin and brave any darkness to find the solution.And darkness is following him....

Compare book prices of Thud!
From the Inside Flap of the Audio Cassette edition



Title: School, Family, and Community Partnerships: Your Handbook for Action
Author: Joyce L Epstein et al
ISBN: 1412959020
EAN: 9781412959025
Third Edition. Edition
352 Pages
Publisher: Corwin Press
Binding: Paperback
Publication date: 2009-01-25


shopcond.avail.pricedelivery coststotal
Book School, Family, and Community Partnerships: Your Handbook for Action on Amazon UK Buy nowNEW£ 31.35free on orders over £ 19£ 31.35Buy now
Book School, Family, and Community Partnerships: Your Handbook for Action new from BooksellerNEW£ 31.35£ 2.75£ 34.10Buy now
Blackwell - Buy NowNEW£ 33.00free on orders over £ 20£ 35.00Buy now

"It?s all here?everything you need to start, sustain, and grow an effective, research-based partnership program. With the addition of a CD-ROM, the essential tools are even more accessible, portable, and adaptable to the challenges and opportunities facing our schools." (Joe Munnich, Family and Community Involvement Coordinator 20080703)

?The link between successful partnership programs and student achievement is supported by research. This book provides the tools you need to establish and sustain partnerships, both on the district and school levels. It?s an invaluable resource for anyone who wants to organize an outstanding partnership program to enhance student success.? (Melissa T. McQuarrie, Director of Community Relations 20080703)

"Useful for state leaders as well as districts and schools. It provides a research-based yet practical blueprint for organizing sustainable partnership programs to support student learning. We use the Handbook to provide training to school teams, parent leaders, school boards, superintendents, and their cabinets across California." (Jeana Preston, Director, California Parent Center 20080703)

?This practical handbook offers a wealth of resources not only for those who are starting to organize their work, but also for those who are sustaining their programs of school, family, and community partnerships. You can make the guidelines fit your district?s needs.? (Lorraine Landon, Director, Parent Education Center Coordinator 20080703)

"This is the ?bible? of parent engagement literature. The Handbook gives step-by-step examples of strategic planning for partnership programs and practices that lead to student success.? (Dave Guzman, Director, Parent Engagement 20080703)

"The third edition is loaded with practical tools, researched-based strategies, and helpful examples for anyone wanting to implement or improve goal-linked programs of family and community involvement. A standout feature is the new CD-ROM, which provides everything needed for successful workshops?a great time-saver!? (Jean West Lewis, Family and Community Outreach Specialist )
1st edition description:''New Edition of Best Seller!'''School, Family, and Community Partnerships is a one-stop survival guide for anyone engaged in starting or improving partnership programs. The detailed, practical information links research findings to effective practices in a most helpful way.'Jane Grinde, Director, Bright Beginnings/Family-School-Community Partnerships, andRuth Anne Landsverk, Families in Education Coordinator Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction'''The research base is evident, and the second edition of the handbook is designed to help educators actually get things done. Everything is included to launch an effective Action Team and to develop a program that links family involvement to school improvement and student achievement.'Arty Dorman, Director of Family &BAD:amp; Community InvolvementSaint Paul Public SchoolsSaint Paul, Minnesota'''The second edition of the Handbook for Action is full of advice, good examples, and information for leaders in elementary, middle, and high schoolsùall based on research. This is an important resource for anyone trying to improve partnerships that support student achievement.'Wendy Harwin, School-Family-Community Partnerships Project CoordinatorConnecticut State Department of Education''A positive program of family and community involvement . . . in a brand new edition! ''This research-based framework of six types of involvement guides state and district leaders, school principals, teachers, parents, and community partners to form Action Teams for Partnershipsùdynamic groups that plan, implement, evaluate, and continually improve family and community involvement for student success.''CorwinÆs first edition of this Handbook, created by researchers at Johns Hopkins University with input from educators and parents, has been a best-seller for years. Now, Joyce L. Epstein and her colleagues offer even more tools and strategiesùinnovations tested for more than fifteen years that are being used by leaders in schools, districts, and state departments of education across the country to create partnership programs that support school improvement goals.''With this new second edition, youÆll learn how to:''''Involve the community in school, family, and community partnerships ''Organize more effective Action Teams for Partnerships ''Strengthen partnership programs in middle and high schools ''Implement interactive homework for students to show and share with their families ''Organize successful volunteers in the middle grades ''Conduct state and district leadership activities to help schools develop partnership programs''Plus, youÆll find new examples of successful partnership activities linked to school goals for students, new planning and evaluation tools, and new guidelines and materials for conducting effective training workshops on partnerships.''ItÆs a valuable and time-tested approach with tools that you can use today to build a comprehensive, inclusive, goal-oriented, and permanent program of partnership! (20080703)
'"School, Family, and Community Partnerships" is a one-stop survival guide for anyone engaged in starting or improving partnership programs. The detailed, practical information links research findings to effective practices in a most helpful way' - Jane Grinde, Director, Bright Beginnings/Family-School-Community Partnerships, and Ruth Anne Landsverk, Families in Education Coordinator Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction. 'The research base is evident, and the second edition of the handbook is designed to help educators actually get things done. Everything is included to launch an effective Action Team and to develop a program that links family involvement to school improvement and student achievement' - Arty Dorman, Director of Family &BAD Community Involvement, Saint Paul Public Schools, Saint Paul, Minnesota.'The second edition of the "Handbook for Action" is full of advice, good examples, and information for leaders in elementary, middle, and high schools, all based on research.

This is an important resource for anyone trying to improve partnerships that support student achievement' - Wendy Harwin, School-Family-Community Partnerships Project Coordinator Connecticut State Department of Education.This is a positive program of family and community involvement ...in a brand new edition! This research-based framework of six types of involvement guides state and district leaders, school principals, teachers, parents, and community partners to form Action Teams for Partnerships, dynamic groups that plan, implement, evaluate, and continually improve family and community involvement for student success. Corwin's first edition of this Handbook, created by researchers at Johns Hopkins University with input from educators and parents, has been a best-seller for years. Now, Joyce L. Epstein and her colleagues offer even more tools and strategies, innovations tested for more than fifteen years that are being used by leaders in schools, districts, and state departments of education across the country to create partnership programs that support school improvement goals.With this new second edition, you'll learn how to: involve the community in school, family, and community partnerships; organize more effective Action Teams for Partnerships; strengthen partnership programs in middle and high schools; implement interactive homework for students to show and share with their families; organize successful volunteers in the middle grades; and, conduct state and district leadership activities to help schools develop partnership programs.

Plus, you'll find new examples of successful partnership activities linked to school goals for students, new planning and evaluation tools, and new guidelines and materials for conducting effective training workshops on partnerships. It's a valuable and time-tested approach with tools that you can use today to build a comprehensive, inclusive, goal-oriented, and permanent program of partnership.

Natalie Rodriguez Jansorn is a state and district facilitator of the National Network of Partnership Schools at Johns Hopkins University. In this capacity, she assists state, district, and organization leaders in establishing school, family, and community partnership programs to support students? school success. She is an experienced speaker at conferences on partner­ships. Previously, she served as the Network?s middle and high school facilitator and devoted particular attention to urban schools. She has developed workshops, tools, and publications to help middle and high schools implement effective partnership activities that are linked to school improvement goals. She is coeditor of the annual collection, Promising Partnership Practices. She earned her MA in education from University of Maryland Baltimore County.

Frances L. Van Voorhis is an associate research scientist at the Center on School, Family, and Community Partnerships and TIPS Coordinator of the National Network of Partnership Schools at Johns Hopkins University. She is the author of research articles on the Teachers Involve Parents in Schoolwork (TIPS) interactive homework process, including a study of the effects of TIPS science in the middle grades on family involvement and students? science skills. In addition, she conducts research on the progress in partnership program development of states, districts, and schools in the National Network. She designs materials to help members conduct work­shops on TIPS Interactive Homework and on the National Network of Partnership Schools. She also develops and coordinates the Network?s annual collection of new TIPS activities. She earned her PhD in developmental psychology from the University of Florida.

Steven B. Sheldon is a research scientist with the Center on School, Family, and Community Partnerships and director of research of NNPS at Johns Hopkins University. He is the author of many publications on the implementation and effects of programs for family and community involvement. His work explores how the quality and outreach of school programs of partnerships affect parents? responses and student outcomes, such as student attendance, math achievement, student behavior, reading, and state achievement test scores. His most recent book guides principals in their leadership and work on school, family, and community partnerships (with Mavis Sanders, Corwin Press, 2009). In his current research, Sheldon is studying the influences of parents? social networks, beliefs, and school outreach on patterns of parental involvement at school and at home and results for students. He earned his PhD in educational psychology from Michigan State University.

Joyce L. Epstein is director of the Center on School, Family, and Community Partnerships and the National Network of Partnership Schools, principal research scientist in the Center for Research on the Education of Students Placed at Risk (CRESPAR), and professor of sociology at Johns Hopkins University. She has over 100 pub­lications on the organization and effects of school, classroom, family, and peer environments, with many focused on school, family, and community connec­tions. In 1995, she established the National Network of Partnership Schools to demonstrate the important intersections of research, policy, and practice for school improvement. She serves on numerous editorial boards and advisory panels on family involvement and school reform and is a recipient of the Academy for Educational Development?s 1991 Alvin C. Eurich Education Award and the 1997 Working Mother?s Magazine Parent Involvement in Education Award for her work on school, family, and community partnerships. Her most recent book, School, Family, and Community Partnerships: Preparing Educators and Improving Schools (Westview Press, 2001), aims to add the topic of family and community involvement to courses for future teachers and admin­istrators. She earned a PhD in sociology from Johns Hopkins University.

Karen Clark Salinas is a senior research assistant at the Center on School, Family, and Community Partnerships at Johns Hopkins University. As communications director of the National Network of Partnership Schools, she is editor of Type 2, the Network?s newsletter, and coeditor of the annual collection Promising Partnership Practices. She also coordinates work­shops and provides technical assistance to members by phone, email, and Web site. She is coauthor of the inventory Starting Points that helps schools identify their present practices of partnership; the Measure of School, Family, and Community Partnerships; and materials for the Teachers Involve Parents in Schoolwork (TIPS) process. She is also coproducer of the video National Network of Partnership Schools: Working Together for Student Success. She earned her MSW in social work from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

Mavis G. Sanders is assistant professor of education in the School of Professional Studies in Business and Education, research scientist at the Center for Research on the Education of Students Placed at Risk (CRESPAR), and senior advisor to the National Network of Partnership Schools at Johns Hopkins University. She is the author of many articles on the effects of school, fam­ily, and community support on African American adolescents? school suc­cess, the impact of partnership programs on the quality of family and community involvement, and international research on partnerships. She is interested in how schools involve families that are traditionally hard to reach, how schools meet challenges for implementing excellent programs and practices, and how schools define ?community? and develop mean­ingful school-family-community connections. Her most recent book is Schooling Students Placed at Risk: Research, Policy, and Practice in the Education of Poor and Minority Adolescents (Lawrence Erlbaum, 2000). She earned her PhD in education from Stanford University.

Beth S. Simon is a social science research analyst at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. She conducts quantitative and qualitative research to improve the quality of services and communica­tions for health care beneficiaries. Previously, she was an associate research scientist at the Center for Research on the Education of Students Placed at Risk (CRESPAR) at Johns Hopkins University, where her research focused on family and community involvement in high schools and the effects of partnerships on high school student success. She also served as dissemination director of the National Network of Partnership Schools and as developer of the Network's Web site. She earned her PhD in sociology from Johns Hopkins University.

Cecelia Martin is associate director of the Maryland Parental Information Resource Center (PIRC). She takes leadership in providing technical assistance to school systems and schools to strengthen local programs and practices of family and community involvement. In her prior work with NNPS at Johns Hopkins University, Martin was senior program facilitator for the Military Child Initiative that assisted districts and schools to work more effectively with families in the military. She also conducted workshops and developed materials for state, district, and school leaders to build partnership programs for student success. She was coeditor of the NNPS Promising Partnership Practices 2007. Previously, Martin served in the U.S. Army Reserve and National Guard, was a high school teacher in the Baltimore City Public School System, has a background in special education, and was an assistant professor of English at Baltimore City Community College. She earned her MEd from Towson University and is pursuing a doctorate in educational administration at Howard University.

Brenda G. Thomas is Maryland director of partnership program development and senior program Facilitator at NNPS. She is supported by a collaborative grant of NNPS with the Maryland Parental Information Resource Center (PIRC). Thomas assists district leaders across the state of Maryland to help their schools organize, implement, and improve programs of school, family, and community partnerships. She also provides professional development workshops for other school, district, state, and PIRC leaders in NNPS. She is a coeditor of Promising Partnership Practices, the NNPS annual collection of members? best practices. Thomas has many years of experience as a teacher, Action Team for Partnerships leader, district-level facilitator for partnerships, and coordinator of parental involvement in the Baltimore City Public School System. She earned her MS in administration supervision from Morgan State University.

Marsha D. Greenfeld is senior program facilitator with NNPS at Johns Hopkins University. She provides professional development to help leaders in districts, states, organizations, and school teams implement and sustain goal-linked programs of family and community involvement. She develops and conducts workshops and provides technical assistance on all aspects of partnership program development. She is coauthor of the book, Family Reading Night (2008, Eye on Education), and a coeditor of annual collections of Promising Partnership Practices. Greenfeld previously was a teacher and district-level facilitator for partnerships in the Baltimore City Public School System. She also worked in the Technical Assistance Branch of the Office of Federal Grants Programs in Washington DC Public Schools and as a partnership coordinator in the national office of Communities in Schools.

Darcy J. Hutchins is a senior program facilitator with NNPS at Johns Hopkins University. She provides professional development to enable district, state, and organization leaders and school teams to establish and maintain comprehensive partnership programs that positively impact student success. Hutchins taught in the Baltimore City Public School System, where she developed and implemented family literacy workshops. She also has experience working with young children with special needs. She is co-author of the book Family Reading Night (2008, Eye on Education), which guides educators to conduct effective literacy events. She also is a coeditor of annual collections of Promising Partnership Practices. She earned her MS in education from Johns Hopkins University and is completing her PhD in education policy at the University of Maryland-College Park.

Kenyatta J. Williams is a data integration/statistical analyst for Prince George's County Public Schools. He works with staff to create data sets by inputting, downloading, organizing, and analyzing data from the Student Information Management System for evaluation and reporting purposes. In his prior work with NNPS at Johns Hopkins University, Williams collected and coordinated data from all schools, districts, states, and organizations and worked with the research staff on many studies. He is coauthor of annual summaries of UPDATE data for schools and districts in NNPS and several research conference presentations. Williams also coordinated NNPS conferences and institutes and provided technical assistance to NNPS members across the country. He earned his MS in information and telecommunication systems for business from Johns Hopkins University.

last viewed books

Roscoe Riley Rules #5: Don't Tap-Dance on Your Teacher (Roscoe Riley Rules (Hardback)) Roscoe Riley Rules #5: Don't Tap-Da...
Gres Gres
Nation Nation
Clinical Linguistics Clinical Linguistics
IUTAM Symposium on Physicochemical and Electromechanical Interactions in Porous Media (Solid Mechanics and Its Applications) (Solid Mechanics and Its Applications) IUTAM Symposium on Physicochemical ...
The Evolution of Awareness The Evolution of Awareness