
In today’s digital age, data plays a pivotal role in transforming how schools operate and communicate. One area where data can have a profound impact is in fostering stronger partnerships between schools and parents, but how is your school leveraging the data it collects to build these partnerships? By harnessing meaningful insights from academic reporting, attendance, behaviour, wellbeing and extracurricular, schools can create a more transparent, collaborative, and supportive environment for students and their families.
Communication
Communication is vital for any healthy relationship; this includes the relationship between your school and your parents. Effective communication ensures parents feel informed, empowered, and supported in their child’s learning journey.
Why communication is essential:
- Transparency: Sharing regular updates helps eliminate surprises and ensures that parents are kept in the loop regarding both positive achievements and areas for improvement.
- Trust: regular communication builds trust and mutual respect between schools and parents, making it easier to collaborate when challenges arise.
- Engagement: When parents are engaged in their child’s education, students tend to be more motivated and perform better academically.
- Timely Intervention: Early communication about attendance, academic progress, or wellbeing concerns allows for joint problem-solving before issues escalate.
Data-Informed Communication: Providing Holistic Insights
Schools can use a variety of data to provide parents with a holistic view of their child’s progress. Instead of waiting for reports at the end of the Semester, regular updates can come through email, SMS, or Parent Portals, giving parents the information they need to be more involved.
Systems like TrackOne Studio’s Learning Analytics Suite provide an extensive list of data, including:
- Academic Reporting
- External Results
- Attendance and Behaviour
- Wellbeing
- Goal Setting
- Extracurricular
- Awards
- Class Summaries
- Cohort Analysis
- Student Dashboards
- Trend Analysis and Notifications
These regular touchpoints create a foundation for collaborative conversations and proactive interventions.
Data-Informed Parent-Teacher Interviews
Using the vast amount of data your school collects before and during parent-teacher interviews can help create more structured, productive conversations. Here are a few ways that you can prepare for data-informed parent-teacher interviews:
- Gathering and organising relevant data: To streamline data gathering and analysis for parent-teacher interviews, schools can use tools like TrackOne Studio that integrates data from different School Management and Learning Management Systems into a single dashboard, making it easier for teachers to access and interpret information.
- Setting Clear Goals and Objectives for the Interview: To ensure a productive parent-teacher interview, set clear goals and objectives based on data, targeting specific needs or strengths.
- Identify Key Focus Areas: Determine primary areas to address, such as improving academic results or increasing class participation.
- Develop Specific, Measurable Goals: Create SMART goals (Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant, Time-bound). The Department of Education Victoria has put together a handy guide that outlines clear examples of setting SMART goals.
- Plan Discussion Points: Outline key discussion points, including data findings, challenges, and strategies.
For more information on preparing for data-informed parent-teacher interviews and how TrackOne Studio can assist in visualising an array of data sets, click here to read one of our previous blogs
Supporting Parental Engagement at Home
On the surface, parental engagement can be seen as parents getting involved and volunteering at school activities. However, this is just the first layer of parental engagement.
According to the Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership (AITSL), there are three levels of parental engagement:
- Parental Involvement with School: This level serves to strengthen the parent-school partnership through traditional in-school activities; this can include volunteering and parent evenings.
- Parent Involvement with Schooling: This stage feeds more into family-led schooling and can include helping with homework and keeping track of coursework.
- Parental Engagement with Learning: The final stage strengthens parental actions and focuses on children’s learning, moral support, and guidance.
Ultimately, supporting parental engagement at home can have positive effects in many areas, including strengthening parent-child relationships, parent-teacher relationships and parent-school partnerships.
Making Data More Accessible
While frequent and clear communication between educators and parents is important, it shouldn’t go unsaid that teachers are extremely busy. According to The Educator, teachers can work up to 15 hours outside of their usual 37-40 hours, so direct communication with parents might not always be possible. With this in mind, it is important that parents can still access the relevant information about their child without needing to schedule a time with teachers.
This is where solutions like TrackOne Studio’s Learning Analytics Suite can assist. TrackOne Studio’s Parent Portal gives parents access to an array of data insights about their children. Information like academic progress, pastoral care, external results, soft skills, goals, and wellbeing is all available for them to view at their own pace. Some benefits that a parent portal can offer include:
- On-demand access: Parents can view a plethora of data about their child at their convenience.
- Reduce reliance on teachers: Instead of waiting for an email or call, parents can check key insights in real time.
- Better-prepared conversations: Parents can review data before speaking with teachers, making discussions more focused and productive.
- Improved Engagement: With easy access to information, parents are more likely to stay actively involved in their child’s education.
A Parent Portal serves as a valuable communication tool, complementing direct teacher interactions while ensuring parents remain informed even during busy school periods
Ultimately, strong communication between schools and parents is about more than just delivering information—it’s about fostering a collaborative relationship centred on student success. By using data effectively and providing access through parent portals, schools can ensure that communication is transparent, timely, and meaningful.
When regular updates are paired with thoughtful, data-informed parent-teacher interviews and accessible digital tools, schools can create an environment where parents feel supported, and students are empowered to thrive. Communication is the bridge that connects all stakeholders in a child’s education, making it a vital tool for building stronger parent-school partnerships.