Your can tailor this to your needs or event (I always like to add one of the quips below the flyers also --
Fathers,
Come bring your child(ren) to school and enjoy free donuts and coffee
Calahan St. Elementary 2nd Annual
Donuts with Dad
Monday March 8th, 2006
7:45am till 8:15ish
in the Auditorium
This is a chance for fathers to relax and socialize with other fathers and their children who also attend Calahan. Afterwards stay and take a tour of the school, your child(s) classroom, new computer lab or checkout the plans for our school playground project, parent center, library or Book Fair
Fathers (Grandfathers, Male Guardians) are equally important to their children’s education, school and social wellbeing. All are welcome to attend a stress free way to start your day.
Sponsored by Calahan St. Elementary PTA
Contact Shawn Minton This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or if you have any questions.
Quips ----
• Children are more likely to get mostly A's if their fathers are involved in their schools. Among children in grades 6 through 12, the odds that children get mostly A's increase by 46 percent if fathers are highly involved in their schools and by 21 percent if fathers are moderately involved in their schools, compared with the children of little-involved men.
• Children enjoy school more when their fathers and mothers participate. The odds that children enjoy school are 30 percent higher if the fathers are moderately involved, and 55 percent higher if they are highly involved.
• Children are more likely to participate in extracurricular activities when their mothers and fathers are involved in their schools.
Source: Fathers' Involvement in Their Children's Schools
According to a 1997 study by the National Center for Education Statistics, children do better in school when their fathers are involved. The study found that children in two-parent families in which the father is highly involved get better grades, enjoy school more, and are less likely to repeat a grade, compared with kids from families in which only mothers are highly involved. In addition, the study found that children do better in school when their fathers take an active role even if their fathers do not live with them.
“The study tells me that if America’s dads got as involved as America’s moms in their children’s education, America’s children would be studying harder and getting a lot more A’s,†said former U.S. Secretary of Education Richard W. Riley.
Other studies show that fathers’ participation enhances children’s ability to make choices and solve problems. “One of the best predictors of whether kids succeed academically is the father’s involvement,†says James A. Levine, director of the The Fatherhood Project at the Families and Work Institute in New York City. First, says Levine, when a father shows an interest in a child’s schoolwork, the father’s values are clearly communicated to his child. And second, teachers take notice when fathers show up, he says. “The whole support system around the child gets more engaged. Mom is engaged, Dad is engaged, and so is the teacher. Dad acts as a trigger for the whole system.â€