The role of parents in educating their children

Lesson plan
Designed for: 
Seminaries, communities
The education system expects parental involvement and sees this involvement as a condition for the success of the educational process. This involvement should be expressed, in the perception of the school, in certain actions such as participation in parent meetings and school activities, representation on the class committee, continuous contact with teachers, etc. An education system may create a situation in which parents from economically and class-disadvantaged social strata are perceived by society and the education system as parents who are not caring and involved enough in their children's education because they are often not active in this way. A deep and sensitive examination of the difficulty of these parents can reveal that it does not stem from a lack of interest or unwillingness to be involved, but from the way in which the education system measures parental care and involvement. The judicial conduct towards them labels, weakens, and excludes these parents in a way that does not allow them to make their voice heard, and creates in them alienation from the system and avoidance of involvement and sometimes even aggression towards it. The school has a significant role in education, but parents have a more crucial role in educating their children. The foundation for education and learning is built at home. Respectful treatment of the educational foundation provided by the home, every home, without labeling of economic or class status will enable cooperation and prevent further weakening of parents. Respectful treatment depends on the ability to listen to these parents, to open up to the culture and language they bring with them, and to the ways in which they express themselves.