Tag: Message

  • 6 steps to transforming parent engagement, one message at a time

    6 steps to transforming parent engagement, one message at a time

    Key points:

    When you open the doors to a brand-new school, you’re not just filling classrooms, you’re building a community from the ground up. In August 2023, I opened our Pre-K through 4th grade school in Charlotte, North Carolina, to alleviate overcrowding at several East Charlotte campuses. As the founding principal, I knew that fostering trust and engagement with families was as essential as hiring great teachers or setting academic goals.

    Many of our students were transitioning from nearby schools, and their families were navigating uncertainty and change. My top priority was to create a strong home-school connection from the very beginning–one rooted in transparency, inclusivity, and consistent communication, where every parent feels like a valued partner in our new school’s success. Since then, we’ve added 5th grade and continue to grow our enrollment as we shape the identity of our school community.

    Up until two years ago, our district was primarily using a legacy platform for our school-to-home communication. It was incredibly limiting, and I didn’t like using it. The district then switched to a new solution, which helped us easily reach out to families (whose children were enrolling at the new elementary school) with real-time alerts and two-way messaging.

    The difference between the two systems was immediately obvious and proved to be a natural transition for me. This allowed us to take a direct, systematic, and friendlier approach to our school-home communications as we implemented the new system.

    Building strong home-school bonds

    Here are the steps we took to ensure a smooth adoption process, and some of the primary ways we use the platform:

    1. Get everyone on board from the start. We used comprehensive outreach with families through flyers, posters, and dedicated communication at open-house events. At the same time, our teachers were easily rostered–a process simplified by a seamless integration with our student information system–and received the necessary training on the platform.
    1. Introduce the new technology as a “familiar tool.” We framed our ParentSquare tool as a “closed social media network” for school-home communication. This eased user adoption and demystified the technology by connecting it to existing social habits. Our staff emphasized that if users could communicate socially online, they could also easily use the platform for school-related interactions.
    1. Promote equity with automatic translation. With a student population that’s about 50 percent Hispanic and with roughly 22 different languages represented across the board, we were very interested in our new platform’s automatic translation capabilities (which currently span more than 190 languages). Having this process automated has vastly reduced the amount of time and number of headaches involved with creating and sharing newsletters and other materials with parents.
    1. Streamline tasks and reduce waste. I encourage staff to create their newsletters in the communications platform versus reverting to PDFs, paper, or other formats for information-sharing. That way, the platform can manage the automatic translation and promote effective engagement with families. This is an equity issue that we have to continue working on both in our school and our district as a whole. It’s about making sure that all parents have access to the same information regardless of their native language.
    1. Centralize proof of delivery. We really like having the communication delivery statistics, which staff can use to confirm message receipt–a crucial feature when parents claim they didn’t receive information. The platform shows when a message was received, providing clear confirmation that traditional paper handouts can’t match. Having one place where all of those communications can be sent, seen, and delivered is extremely helpful.
    1. Manage events and boost engagement. The platform keeps us organized, and we especially like the calendar and post functions (and use both a lot). Being able to sort specific groups is great. We use that feature to plan events like staggered kindergarten entry and separate open houses; it helps us target communications precisely. For a recent fifth-grade promotion ceremony, for example, we managed RSVPs and volunteer sign-ups directly through the communications platform, rather than using an external tool like Sign-Up Genius. 

    Modernizing school-family outreach

    We always want to make it easy for families to receive, consume, and respond to our messages, and our new communications platform helps us achieve that goal. Parents appreciate receiving notifications via email, app, voice, or text–a method we use a lot for sending out reminders. 

    This direct communication is particularly impactful given our diverse student population, with families speaking many different languages. Teachers no longer need third-party translation sites or manual cut-and-paste methods because the platform handles automatic translation seamlessly. It’s helped us foster deeper family engagement and bridge communication gaps we otherwise couldn’t–it’s really amazing to see.

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  • Trump’s $16M win over ’60 Minutes’ edit sends chilling message to journalists everywhere

    Trump’s $16M win over ’60 Minutes’ edit sends chilling message to journalists everywhere

    On Tuesday, Paramount announced an agreement to pay $16 million to settle President Donald Trump’s lawsuit over the editing of a “60 Minutes” interview with Kamala Harris.

    The following can be attributed to FIRE attorney Bob Corn-Revere, who filed a comment to the FCC calling its investigation into the Harris interview a “political stunt”:

    A cold wind just blew through every newsroom this morning. Paramount may have closed this case, but it opened the door to the idea that the government should be the media’s editor-in-chief.

    Trump has a long history of filing frivolous lawsuits to intimidate critics, and his targets have a long history of capitulating to avoid legal headaches. And here, he had the added tactic of using the FCC and its review of the multi-billion dollar Paramount-Skydance merger to bring added pressure to bear.

    Behavior that gets rewarded gets repeated. This settlement will only embolden the president to continue his flurry of baseless lawsuits against the press — and against the American people’s ability to hear the news free from government intrusion.

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  • Final Message | The Universities at Shady Grove (USG)

    Final Message | The Universities at Shady Grove (USG)

    Hello everyone,

    Today is the last post of the semester, and my last post. I will graduate with my Bachelor’s degree at the end of this semester. So, I thought I would reflect and share everything I learned and am still learning.

    I chose to write all my blog posts with the theme of stress because it is at the root of struggles regarding mental health, impacting well-being, and connects us all. Stress is a reaction that leads us to feel stressed, which can consume and mess with our well-being and mental health. I also chose to add plenty of images or videos because, as a visual learner, seeing something that captures the essence of ideas helps convey the message and grabs attention to help with understanding. I thought I would insert as many eye-catching images capturing the feel of the concept, connecting the audience with the message as it does with me. Before coming to USG, through the psychology program at UMBC, I also studied art at MC, and putting images in blogs helped me connect meaning with visual aids in writing.

    Here are my favorite posts and visuals, a reflection on them, lessons, experiences, and tips:

    In Handling Stress for Health and Wellness, I mentioned that stress can affect health and well-being, detailing the manifestations of stress, some I became familiar with.

    Source: Health and Fitness, Medium https://images.app.goo.gl/DeJDXpaZKLCJPbLR8

    Getting on track, one step and breath at a time, mentioned clear headspace, productivity, focus, motivation, and how to avoid stress getting in the way of that. I learned about productivity and the power of visualization in something like decluttering, how a clear and organized space helps mental ease in tracking stress and productivity for success.

    Source: https://images.app.goo.gl/KF17kySWP5n4cTej9
    Source:https://images.app.goo.gl/5tpSKWE6PVAwir7r8

    Presenting Yourself, showcasing how stress is so powerful in interfering with speech, expressing feelings of doubt, incertainty, and nerves I experienced.

    Source: Google Images, Calm Clinic, https://images.app.goo.gl/k79MfM5vBGbPvGBc8

    Refocusing; with Colors of Spring power of visualization, seeing the colors and catching attention, distracting from working, and continuing motivation, trying to mess with staying on track, influencing stress, related to my last post Reigiting, Recharging and Reseting, about Burnout, the way to combat the distractions, lack of or change in motivations whether it is exhaustion or relaxation, the key is balance to stay happy and healthy flow of work and productivity.

    Source:https://images.app.goo.gl/7rQxnmA5WrXXwWo66

    I underestimated breathing, slowing down, resting, simplifying, moving, stretching, and knowing I am not alone. I will add being gentle with yourself, going back to the basics, letting go, embracing change, adapting to challenges, turning it into a positive, and working on mindset, as things I learned, and additional tips.

    Source: https://images.app.goo.gl/EsbkQZXb4SCmhQ2G7

    Here is my final message: Stress is a part of life; accept and overcome it.

    Source: Happiness.com, https://images.app.goo.gl/C812SQL8QJ3ooih49

    I met many people who influenced my journey and introduced me to resources that helped me with my growth, progress, and success. Thank you for reading my posts, and I wish everyone good luck with finals and the future.

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    About Daniela Garcia-Rojas

    A First generation- American and Colombian-American aspiring psychologist focusing on wellness through education, writing about mental health, stress, and mindset. A senior in the Psychology program at UMBC at USG and MC graduate with an Associate of Arts . I also live with physical and learning disabilities, which have shaped my unique journey. I enjoy art, writing, reading, and arts and crafts; I used to swim, horseback ride, and practice archery.

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