Your Quick Guide to Family Projects: A Home-School Connection Booster for Early Ed - Brookes Blog

Your Quick Guide to Family Projects: A Home-School Connection Booster for Early Ed

March 16, 2021

Family projects are a great way for early childhood programs to enhance the home-school connection, particularly at a time when many children are learning at home. In today’s post, we’re sharing some examples, tips, and a free download—excerpted and adapted from Six Steps to Inclusive Preschool Curriculum by Horn, Palmer, Butera, & Lieber—that will help you integrate family projects into your curriculum.

Family projects can be based on different themes and skills. The best ones involve a variety of activities and use inexpensive materials that families already have or can easily get. Here are three examples of projects you might give the families of your young learners:

Measurement

During a classroom theme on exploring measurement, a project could encourage families to measure at home and share how they use measurement in their lives. One project option could involve a poster in which families are encouraged to trace and measure their feet, find measuring tools at home, and measure items with an included paper ruler. You could also encourage families to make a recipe together that involves measuring or design their own measurement tool. Family members could be invited to join the class to share how they use measurement at home or on the job.

Construction

If you’re teaching a classroom theme on construction, a family project could encourage families to talk about buildings and other structures around them and then construct something together. Families could be encouraged to construct their own creation using marshmallows and toothpicks that you send home. Family members could be invited to talk about construction they do in their daily lives, participate in making something with the class, or participate in a field trip to a construction site.

Neighborhoods

To pair with a classroom theme on neighborhoods, you could assign a family project that encourages families to go for a walk and look at and listen to things around them. You might include a template of a book that instructs children to draw what is around them and identify different sounds that they may hear. Family members could be invited to lead a walk with a small group of children on a field trip to a park or neighborhood.

With a little creativity and knowledge of the families you work with, you can easily design meaningful family projects that build on your current curriculum. Keep the following tips and guidelines in mind when designing and implementing family projects:

Research suggests that family projects can be an effective way to reinforce and extend what you’re doing in the classroom. Findings from a study examining the effect of family projects in a Head Start program over two years suggested that the projects were a promising way to connect learning between school and home. Families reported that they enjoyed the projects, the projects promoted positive interactions with their child, and they benefited from the opportunity to see what their child was learning and doing.

FREE DOWNLOAD

In this excerpt from Six Steps to Inclusive Preschool Curriculum, get more in-depth information on how to introduce an “I Can Measure” family project.