How do Japanese schools promote parental involvement?
College
College of Liberal Arts
Department/Unit
Behavioral Sciences
Document Type
Article
Source Title
International Journal of Social Sciences and Humanity Studies
Volume
2
Issue
1
First Page
91
Last Page
98
Publication Date
2010
Abstract
This study describes the different practices in Japanese elementary and junior high schools aimed at forging partnerships between teachers and parents and among parents through parental involvement. The different types of parental involvement are arranged following Greenwood and Hickman’s typology (1991) namely, parents as audience, volunteers, paraprofessionals, teachers, learners, and decision makers. Additionally, two other types of parental roles—parents as partners of teachers and other parents—are identified. The data for this paper were drawn from the author’s limited participant observation in Japanese schools as part of a larger doctoral study on educational outcomes and experiences of bicultural children in Japan. This paper aims to contribute to the different approaches in understanding parental involvement.
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Recommended Citation
Jabar, M. A. (2010). How do Japanese schools promote parental involvement?. International Journal of Social Sciences and Humanity Studies, 2 (1), 91-98. Retrieved from https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/7202
Disciplines
Education | Social and Behavioral Sciences
Keywords
Education—Parent participation—Japan; Schools—Japan
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