Today class was about a matter that, as
teaching, will require our best in the future, but is usually less treated as
if it weren't so important (and actually it is); how to run a good
parent-teacher conference. This is a meeting between the parents and the
teacher to discuss and exchange any information about the children educational,
behavioral and personal progress and development, and to try to solve any
problem in the most effective and rapid way.
We started showing a video selected by the
teacher, where we could see an American perfect run parent-teacher conference, that gave us some
tips about how to do it:
- Welcome
the parents.
- Talk
about the positive aspects of the student first, then the bad ones.
-Have
material ready to show.
- Improve
the success of the student with homework.
- Let the
parents know what are exactly the materials their child usually uses.
- Bring a
portfolio of the student's work.
- Send
home-sheets with questions for the parents.
- Know
very well your objectives.
- Prepare
students for conference.
-It is
good that parent takes notes.
- State
the purpose and the time for the conference.
-
Describe the child's progress in major areas and ask how they feel about
child's progress.
- Set
mutual goals and establish timelines for goals.
-
Summarize (thanks for coming, set another meeting day...).
-
Evaluate conference: follow up with students and follow up with parents.
We made a last participative activity,
which consisted on recreating (with some of the people in the class) some
typical and common parent-teacher conference situations, so some roles were:
the counselor, divorced parents, a child with an abuse problem, a mother
worried about her child... That required some imagination from those actuating.
This class has been very useful in order
to teach us how to do a future task in an appropriate way. Also, with the
information shown and the last activity we have completely realized about its
importance and it's difficulty, something that has encouraged most of us.