91制片厂视频

Families & the Community Leader To Learn From

Boston Leader Connects Parents to Learning

By Michele Molnar 鈥 January 29, 2013 7 min read
Michele Brooks
Recognized for 91制片厂视频 in Parent Engagement
Expertise:
Parent Engagement
Position:
Assistant superintendent, office of family and student engagement
Success District:
Boston Public Schools
Year:
2013
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The day Michele Brooks 鈥渓ost it鈥 as the frustrated mother of a Boston high school student became a moment that transformed her life forever.
That was 20 years ago, and today Brooks works inside the Boston school system as the assistant superintendent in charge of the district鈥檚 office of family and student engagement.

Brooks is credited with strategically aligning Boston鈥檚 parent-engagement efforts with the district鈥檚 academic goals, which moved the work of her office from a peripheral activity to one that is central to the needs of the district鈥檚 57,000 students and their families.

鈥淲hen I first started in this role, I could say I was the only one who would bring up, 鈥楽o, what about the families?鈥 Now, whether I鈥檓 at the table or not, the conversation is about the families,鈥 says Brooks, who has been leading the office for the past four years.

One of her high-profile efforts over that time has been launching and overseeing Parent University鈥攁 program that has educated parents on their roles as teachers, advocates, leaders, and learners themselves. Her staff collaborates with the other offices in the district, coordinates outreach and training, creates publications, and implements programs to advance the district鈥檚 vision: 鈥淓very school will welcome every family and every student, actively engaging them as partners in student learning and school improvement.鈥

None of that was in Brooks鈥 scope as the disgruntled mother of a 9th grade daughter two decades ago. Brooks, 59, had moved her family from Tennessee back to Boston so her three children could benefit from the outstanding education she herself had received in public schools there.

But things went south fast. When her daughter received an A on a slapdash essay, and defiantly conveyed a guidance counselor鈥檚 comment that 鈥渘ot everyone is cut out for college,鈥 Brooks鈥攚ho worked in information technology then鈥攃ame to the school to talk with the principal. His secretary first ignored, then insulted her, Brooks says.

鈥淚 was livid,鈥 Brooks recalls. The principal respectfully asked Brooks why she was so upset, saying, 鈥溾業 work for you. How can we make this right?鈥 鈥 He explained his challenges with the teaching staff and enlisted Brooks鈥 help, asking that she demand better, and be present at the school.

Brooks volunteered the following day, then the next鈥攓uickly deciding to leave her full-time job so she could devote even more time to the schools.

Brooks has never looked back. She started a family center in her daughter鈥檚 high school where parents can meet to network and seek resources. She also helped organize parents when the school lost accreditation and, four years later, shared in the pride as the school graduated an entire class of students. 鈥淓very single one had a college-admission letter or was going into the [military] service,鈥 she says.

Organizing Parents

She went on to become the founding director of the Boston Parents Organizing Network, which began as a community-based group advocating to avert school budget cuts and establish a strong office of family and community engagement. Brooks spent five years in the network and later was appointed to the school board. Superintendent Carol Johnson recruited Brooks for her current position in 2008.

鈥淎s an organizer鈥攖hat鈥檚 how I do this work. I鈥檓 always looking for connections. That鈥檚 the key. When the district lays out its priorities, every single one of my colleagues has a piece of that work, including me,鈥 says Brooks. 鈥淚 do an analysis: How can I support their work and connect our work?鈥

For example, this year the district鈥檚 priority is literacy. Her office conducted a parent and child writing club, which turned out to be a successful pilot, with 15 families meeting to improve their 3rd, 4th, and 5th graders鈥 performance as writers on open-response assignments. Over eight sessions, parents and children worked on projects together. Eventually, parents became writing coaches for their children.

Michele Brooks

This laser focus on broader districtwide goals means Boston has avoided the pitfalls of similar family-related offices in many other districts, where schools become caught up in what experts call 鈥渞andom acts of family engagement,鈥 says Karen L. Mapp, a lecturer at the Harvard Graduate School of 91制片厂视频 and the director of its education policy and management program. 鈥淚n Boston public schools, we really see that family engagement is a strategy toward whole-school improvement,鈥 Mapp says.

Brooks鈥 first step when taking her position was to define 鈥渇amily and student engagement鈥 as the work of everybody in the district: administrators, teachers, support staff, custodians, and bus drivers.

The school system adopted the National PTA鈥檚 six standards for family-school partnerships, and measures schools and teachers against them. 鈥淲e measure ourselves to those standards, too,鈥 Brooks explains.

Early on, Brooks confronted another issue. 鈥淲e know the folks in the district really believe family and student engagement is critically important. One of the assumptions you make is that, if you believe in it, you鈥檒l go out and do it. That was wrong,鈥 she says.

So Brooks began to focus on a new area: capacity building. For her shrinking staff, that meant training them to do more with less, deepen their knowledge base, focus on strategies rather than events, and leverage instructional shifts to influence educational practice. For parents, she says, the goal was to 鈥渂uild confidence in their own ability to navigate the school system, advocate for their children, partner with their teachers to support student learning"鈥攈elping them to become what Rudy Crew, a former schools chief in the New York City and Miami-Dade County, Fla., districts, calls 鈥渄emand parents.鈥

Saturday 鈥楿niversities鈥

One way Brooks鈥 office attempts to do that is through Parent University, launched in her first year on the job. Parents choose classes in three intensive Saturday 鈥渦niversities鈥 throughout the year. Topics include what children should know at different grade levels, their brain development, how to deal with adolescents, how to navigate the school system to advocate for your child, healthy cooking, and how to use a computer. Those programs have more than doubled in attendance since they began. In addition, parents attend satellite sessions in a range of subject areas, from English-as-a-second-language instruction to completing their own high school education or getting a GED. Funding for Parent University primarily comes from the district鈥檚 Title I funds.

I鈥檓 always looking for connections. That鈥檚 the key. When the district lays out its priorities, every single one of my colleagues has a piece of that work, including me. I do an analysis: How can I support their work and connect our work?

In her second year, Brooks鈥 team created grade-level guides for student learning in conjunction with the curriculum and instruction office. The guides instruct parents about what their students should be learning as they progress through school. Aligned with the Common Core State Standards, those guides have been translated into a number of languages.

In 2011, Brooks鈥 office launched professional development to help educators think about family engagement in new ways. Plans are also in the works to award 鈥淔amily Friendly School Certification鈥 to schools that excel or progress in their efforts to engage families.

A backdrop to the accomplishments of Brooks and her office are the budget cuts that caused the size of her staff to drop from 23 when she was hired in 2008 to 13 today, and shrank her budget to its current level of $2.9 million.

They were 鈥渁 curse because we鈥檙e limited in what we can do, and a blessing because [they] really forced us to focus and prioritize,鈥 she says.

Brooks鈥 work has gained a national reputation, partially thanks to her position as a founding member of the District Leaders Network on Family and Community Engagement, a 50-member peer network that brings together district leaders from across the country to meet in Washington at the Institute for 91制片厂视频al 91制片厂视频.

Michael Sarbanes, the executive director of the office of engagement for the Baltimore public schools, is one of the district leaders who have worked closely with Brooks through the network. 鈥淲hat I think has been extraordinary about how Michele has come at the work is a combination of her deep experience working with parents, coupled with an understanding of the leverage points around academic achievement within the school system, and then how to link those up,鈥 he says.

Brooks鈥 ultimate goal is to create sufficient capacity so that her office will be unnecessary. 鈥淚f we鈥檝e done our job right, we will not have a job,鈥 she says.

Coverage of leadership, expanded learning time, and arts learning is supported in part by a grant from The Wallace Foundation, at www.wallacefoundation.org. 91制片厂视频 Week retains sole editorial control over the content of this coverage.
A version of this article appeared in the February 06, 2013 edition of 91制片厂视频 Week

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