Abstract

According to the Conservation of Resources theory of stress, early care and education (ECE) teachers who receive greater tangible and interpersonal supports from their workplaces will be more positive and effective in their roles. This may translate to them perceiving or eliciting greater support from families, which is a key component to family engagement, a growing area of study in the ECE landscape. This study explores whether four program-level supports (benefits, professional development supports, teacher social supports, program-level family involvement activities) are associated with teacher-perceived support from families. The hypothesis was that all four will be positively associated. This study uses survey data from 102 preschool teachers and 13 preschool program directors in urban areas of two US states. We use ordinary least squares regression with cluster-robust standard errors and a stepwise build-up modeling procedure to determine associations between independent and dependent variables. While teacher social supports had the expected positive association with teacher-perceived support from families, family involvement activities were negatively associated. Our findings suggest that programs looking to improve family engagement may consider interpersonal/cultural supports for teachers and the larger school community. All else equal, simply offering more family involvement activities may not improve engagement culture.

Highlights

  • The family–teacher relationship is the core of family engagement in school (NzingaJohnson et al 2009)

  • In US early care and education (ECE) settings—which comprise preschool, center-based child care, family-based child care, Head Start, and other educational and care programs for children before kindergarten—the family–teacher relationship is associated with a range of outcomes, including attendance (Waanders et al 2007) and literacy growth (Nix et al 2018)

  • An ECE behavioral intervention studied in randomized control trials (RCTs), the

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Summary

Introduction

The family–teacher relationship is the core of family engagement in school (NzingaJohnson et al 2009). An ECE behavioral intervention studied in randomized control trials (RCTs), the “gold standard” of scientific studies in which participants are randomly assigned to conditions and their outcomes compared to test causal effects, suggests that the family–teacher relationship may be a mechanism of improving young children’s social skills (Kuhn et al.2017; Sheridan et al 2010, 2017). Despite these benefits and increased attention to family–educator relationships in recent years (Nitecki 2015), little is known about the building blocks of the relationship, such as mutual support, communication

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