Photo by Michał Parzuchowski on Unsplash

Keeping up with children, homework, sports, friends, discipline, family-time, relatives and relationships can be overwhelming. There’s hardly a time for another commitment and now the school you are enrolling your child in wants to meet with you regularly throughout the year?

While it sounds like extra work, and one more entry into your calendar, forming a parent-teacher partnership is in fact a method that the PARED schools instill in order to save you time.

James Ramos, Head of Primary, has taught hundreds if not thousands of students in his 20+ years at Redfield College, and has seen the effectiveness that working closely with parents can have on the development of their children.

“One of the things we do early on in Year Two, at the first function where parents come to the school and the class teacher talks to the parents and explains to them about the various routines that we’re going to have during the year or the different programs and how parents can help their children with their homework or with learning their spelling words, etc.”

In the early years of schooling, if the parents can be aware of the types of lessons and approaches that the teachers are taking to teach that child, parents can complement it at home, reinforcing goals and habits, and encouraging their child in a consistent way. A child who is the same at home and at school is already a step in the right direction to forming character.

“For you to sit down for 10 minutes and write down on a piece of paper, the most salient personality traits of your child, that becomes incredibly valuable information for the teacher. So that’s just an example of how it’s not extra work it’s just making the partnership between the parents and the school more effective and more efficient.”

The reality is that parents will know and understand their children far more than the new teacher at school.

“It might take me months to figure out for myself, where your child needs help the most. But you know your child best, therefore, tell me now how I can help your child or tell me now where your child’s strengths and weaknesses are.”

This article was inspired by episode #5 of The Parent-Teacher Project entitled Consistency Builds Character with James Ramos and Nathan Frazer.

Listen to the episode below.

Don’t forget to leave us a review on Apple Podcasts!

Where do you like to listen?

Tailor your experience by choosing the platform that you prefer to access all your podcast shows.

Latest Stories from PARED Academy

Making The Most Out of School Mentoring

Making The Most Out of School Mentoring

School mentoring programs are fantastic. Growing up from K-12 with your very own mentor is a luxury that not every school will have. But how can you make the most out…

How To Improve Your Wellbeing

How To Improve Your Wellbeing

Photo by Isaac Quesada on Unsplash Do you look to others for ways to improve your own wellbeing? Whether that be through friends, podcasts, professionals or social media influencers, often we search...

The Olympic Games That Brought Us All Together

The Olympic Games That Brought Us All Together

Photo by Shinnosuke Ando on Unsplash It was the second month of a state-wide lockdown in some states of Australia when the 2021 Olympic and Paralympic Games brought many of us a distraction, source...