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The Harvard Family Research Project separated from the Harvard Graduate School of Education to become the Global Family Research Project as of January 1, 2017. It is no longer affiliated with Harvard University.

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Dear FINE Member,

Here are this month's FINE member updates. Please feel free to forward this information to your friends and other education colleagues.

Last month, as part of our longstanding commitment to using evidence to build the family involvement field, we shared new resources with implications for practice and policy. This month, we announce our involvement in a new effort to support and build the evidence base for family involvement practice and policy at the federal level: Harvard Family Research Project (HFRP) is collaborating with the Southwest Educational Development Laboratory (SEDL) to serve as the National Coordination Center for the Parental Information and Resource Centers (PIRC) program.

The national PIRC program provides federal funds to 60 centers in states across the country, working to implement successful parental involvement policies, programs, and activities. As part of the Coordination Center, HFRP is providing technical assistance and support to the PIRCs on a variety of topics, including evaluation strategies and approaches.

We are excited about the synergy between our work with the PIRCs and FINE, and we look forward to our audiences informing each other as they continue to build the family involvement field. In the spirit of learning, this month's announcement includes new research-based resources, including the latest FINE bibliography, to support your evidence-based practice.

New From FINE

  • New Bibliographies: Current Family Involvement Research

    Our bibliography of family involvement research published in 2006 is now available online. We have also updated our bibliography of 2005 publications. These two years enjoyed a significant and exciting increase in scholarly output in family involvement. All eight annual FINE bibliographies on our website include journal articles, dissertations and theses, books and book chapters, reports, research briefs, and papers.

New From HFRP

  • Upcoming Event: HFRP Symposium at the AERA Annual Meeting

    Harvard Family Research Project has organized a symposium session at America Educational Research Association's (AERA) 2007 Annual Meeting in Chicago. The symposium, "Family Involvement Interventions: Shining the Spotlight on Evaluation," will take place on Tuesday, April 10, 12:25 a.m.-1:55 p.m. at the Marriott Chicago Downtown, Denver Room, Fifth Floor. HFRP director Heather Weiss will chair the session. Panelists include Lynn McDonald (FAST), Chad Nye (University of Central Florida), Dana Peterson (SRI), Margaret Caspe (HFRP), and James Rodriguez (San Diego State University). You can find general information about the conference at the link above.

  • New Evaluation Exchange on Advocacy and Policy Change

    Advocacy that influences or informs public policy has the potential to achieve large-scale results for individuals, families, and communities. Consequently, there is much interest in understanding how to make advocacy and policy change efforts more effective. While previously relegated as “too hard to measure,” advocacy evaluation has become a burgeoning field. This 32-page issue of The Evaluation Exchange helps to build this new field by defining the developments that are shaping it and showing how enterprising evaluators, nonprofits, and funders are tackling the advocacy evaluation challenge.

Guides and Tool Kits

  • Parental Use of Child Care: A Guide for Constructing Parent Surveys

    This guide by the Oregon Child Care Research Partnership offers directions for constructing surveys to collect information on the ways that parents use child care.

  • Working Together: School–Family–Community Partnerships

    Created by The Center for the Education and Study of Diverse Populations (CESDP) at New Mexico Highlands University, this tool kit is based on the National PTA’s standards for parent and community involvement programs and is designed to support the development of school, family and community partnerships. The tool kit is divided into three sections: teacher, family, and professional development tools.

Policy

Articles & Reports

Contact Us

If you experience a problem reading this newsletter or have questions and comments concerning our work, we would love to hear from you. Please send an email to fine@gse.harvard.edu.

Enjoy!

The FINE Team at Harvard Family Research Project

© 2016 Presidents and Fellows of Harvard College
Published by Harvard Family Research Project