1st Edition

Learning Begins at Home A Study of a Junior School and its Parents

By Michael Young, Patrick McGeeney Copyright 1968

    First published in 1968, Learning Begins at Home records an attempt by two researchers to initiate and assess an innovation in a school in a working-class neighbourhood. The influence of parents upon children’s achievement is a platitude of education. The vital question is whether schools can become centres for education for adults as well as children, influencing the parents directly, and the children indirectly through the parents. The research reported in this book suggests that it would be worthwhile for teachers to give more of their time to cooperation with parents. This book will be of interest to students of education and sociology.

    Foreword 1. The setting for the study 2. Parents’ contacts with the school 3. Parents’ attitudes before the trial 4. The changes in the school 5. Immigrants 6. Tests of educational performance 7. Cum Parente Appendices Index

    Biography

    Michael Young and Patrick McGeeney