with parents for children’s education and development.
The Czech School Inspectorate considers cooperation
with parents the most effective tool in bringing about
change. In March 2019, Mongolia’s Ministry of Education
and Science adopted a regulation on education quality
and child development aiming to create a favourable
environment for constructive voluntary engagement
and requiring parents and guardians to be consulted on
any decisions concerning children. A 2012 law in Tajikistan
makes parents responsible for their children’s education
and upbringing. Although they cannot influence education
content, they can, for example, determine the language
of instruction. In Ukraine, the 2019 general secondary
education law is based on ‘new school’ principles, one
of which is teachers’ responsibility for implementing
the principle of pedagogy of partnership with parents
and students (Ukraine Ministry of Education and
Science, 2019).
Schools in Armenia, Georgia, Slovenia and Ukraine
engage parents in various types of individual learning
programmes or approaches for children with special
needs or disabilities. Some countries also stress parental
involvement in the school improvement process. In Latvia
and Mongolia, regulations cover parental involvement
in school self-assessment and in collaborative problem
solving; in Latvia, that includes proposing school
inspections to be carried out. In North Macedonia,
the school inclusion team, which includes parents,
develops and delivers inclusion activities at the school
level, adjusting and applying them to teaching and
learning practice.
Effective partnerships can be challenging. Parents
need to communicate and cooperate effectively with
teachers. They also need access to information about
school organization and requirements and their children’s
achievements and challenges. The right to information
on learner achievement is enshrined in legislation in
Azerbaijan, Estonia and Latvia. Nevertheless, schools
need to communicate well and provide clear information
to all parents, including those harder to reach, for whom
schools must provide flexible opportunities to become
actively engaged in their children’s learning process
(European Agency, 2018).
Countries use a variety of communication channels and
activities to reach and engage parents. Belarus organizes
cultural, sport and non-formal education events with
children with special needs and their parents. In Estonia,
schools call a meeting of learners’ parents at least once
a year, giving all of them the chance to participate.
Georgia’s general education law makes it class teachers’
responsibility to communicate with parents and offer
information on their children’s learning.
In North Macedonia, parental involvement is part of a
strategy dealing with enrolment rates. The country’s
share of 6- to 14-year-olds not in school remained
constant at about 10% between 2006/07 and 2015/16,
and most were in vulnerable situations, mainly Roma
(Mickovska et al., 2017). The country’s national education
strategy for 2018–25, which aims to achieve universal
coverage and improve inclusion in primary education, has
established interventions at the policy, institutional and
individual levels. For instance, scholarships and support by
local coordinators led to a 95% retention rate of children
targeted in 2019. Structured informal meetings between
parents of out-of-school children and class teachers
are used to monitor the support measures to establish
positive, trustworthy and productive cooperation.
Attendance rates in these meetings were higher than in
regular parent meetings.
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