Introduction to the Special Issue: Selected Papers from the 21st Roundtable of the International Network (INET) on School, Family, and Community Partnerships
- Toward Greater Equity in Partnerships;
- Student, Parent, and Teacher Voices on Family Engagement;
- Follow Up: COVID Effects on Family Engagement and Student Learning;
- Preservice and Inservice Education on Partnerships;
- Partnership Program Organization, Implementation, and Measurement.
1. Topic: Impact of COVID-19 and School Closures on Teachers, Families, and Students
2. Topic: Program Development: Improving Teachers’ Practices of Family Engagement
3. Topic: Program Development: Increasing Equity in Family Engagement for Those with Low- and High-Incomes
4. Topic: Program Development: Engaging Unique Populations of Families and Students
5. Topic: Welcoming New Parents to Schools and Communities
6. Topic: New Measure of Family Engagement in Summer School Programs
7. Topic—Parent Views of School Quality and Inclusion
8. Topic: Preservice Education/Teacher Preparation for Engaging Families in Children’s Learning
9. Discussion
- The challenge of low or no budgets. Most researchers (i.e., graduate students and faculty) have no or low budgets. This restriction leads many to conduct small qualitative or mixed-methods studies with a few focus groups or a small number of interviews. Specialists in qualitative methods report that samples of 20 people (or as few as 9) create a saturation point for researchers to identify important themes and to adequately cover the range of participants’ perceptions, reflections, and experiences (Guest et al. 2006; Morse 2015). The small studies may open new questions for larger, more representative studies using quantitative and qualitative methods to learn if and how emerging ideas affect schools, students, and/or families in diverse communities. The next-stage studies, however, often require substantial funding from government or philanthropic sources.
- The requirement to contribute something new to the knowledge base. All researchers must make an original contribution to the literature in their dissertations and publishable articles. This important requirement may lead those with no or low budgets to select a clear—but marginal—question that was unanswered in a prior study due to limitations of data. A small, focused study can contribute something new to the knowledge base, but by itself cannot be applied broadly to improve school programs. Quantitative studies also are needed that test hypotheses with large representative and diverse samples to determine if, how, and for whom strategies for programs of school, family, and community partnerships have been adequately tested and proven in practice. Combined with the previous budgetary challenge, the field is left with a wide range of initial promising findings in need of confirmation and/or further investigation.
- The need for more opportunities for graduate students in the social sciences to specialize in quantitative methods to test hypotheses with large, representative samples. Although both quantitative and qualitative methods are important for exploring important questions in education research, recent accounts suggest qualitative methods are becoming more prominent in the social sciences. Many PhD programs and most EdD programs do not require students to take more than an introductory course in advanced quantitative methods, and few students specialize in these methods. Yet, these skills are needed to analyze data with large samples of educators, parents, and/or students across grade levels in diverse locations to identify successful programs and practices for widespread school improvement. This is true for all topics in social research including school, family, and community partnerships to establish and sustain programs of family engagement that contribute to student success in school.
- The need for programmatic research to improve school programs and practices of family and community engagement—the RD&D agenda. In programmatic research, one study leads to the next—always with clearer and more critical questions. Programmatic research includes quantitative studies with large and diverse samples of students, teachers, and parents, and qualitative research with small samples to learn about participants’ perspectives and experiences. Both methods can support longitudinal studies that measure and report results over time. Programmatic research on family and community engagement must add up across many studies to yield convincing and generalizable results on the structures, processes, and results of programs and practices that promote and guide school improvement.
Conflicts of Interest
List of Contributions
- Glickman, Rachel, and Kristin Labs. 2025. Renegotiating Borders Between Home and School During Pandemic Times: The Experiences of Rural Vermont Public Elementary Educators. Social Sciences 14: 271. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14050271.
- Hine, Megumi G., Steven B. Sheldon, and Yolanda Abel. 2025. Navigating the Disproportionate Impact of COVID-19 in Community Schools. Social Sciences 14: 223. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14040223.
- Hobbs, Savannah, Rashida Banerjee, Gloria E. Miller, Lydia Dumam, Rachel Kamnkhwani, Grace C. Ilori, and Clara Cuthbert. 2025. Outcomes of a Virtual Community of Practice with Community Navigators Aimed at Fostering Family–School–Community Partnerships. Social Sciences 14: 162. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14030162.
- Nathans, Laura, and Smita Guha. 2025. Development and Test of a Summer Family Involvement Questionnaire. Social Sciences 14: 249. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14040249.
- Peltier, Marliese R., Patricia A. Edwards, Jacquelyn Sweeney, Heather L. Reichmuth, Kristen L. White, Darreth R. Rice, and Ann Castle. 2025. Exploring How Educators Perceive Enacting Asset-Based Family Engagement. Social Sciences 14: 191. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14040191.
- Pusztai, Gabriella, Katinka Bacskai, Tímea Ceglédi, Zsófia Kocsis, and Megumi G. Hine. 2025. Mission Possible? Institutional Family-School-Community Partnership Practices and Parental Involvement in Hungarian Majority and Minority Schools in Three Central and Eastern European Countries. Social Sciences 14: 107. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14020107.
- Ryan, Sandra, Eleanor Walsh, and Maeve Liston. 2025. “The Parents Were Brilliant!” Engaging Parents in STEM Learning: Insights from Preservice Teachers’ Field Experience. Social Sciences 14: 215. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14040215.
- Velázquez, Sobeida. 2025. Transfronterizx Family, Their Children, and U.S. Educators in Border Communities. Social Sciences 14: 263. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14050263.
- Vogel-Campbell, Kristin. 2025. Parent Perceptions of Inclusion in the Development of District Community Schools. Social Sciences 14: 127. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14030127.
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Epstein, J.L.; Abel, Y.; Sheldon, S.B. Introduction to the Special Issue: Selected Papers from the 21st Roundtable of the International Network (INET) on School, Family, and Community Partnerships. Soc. Sci. 2025, 14, 604. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14100604
Epstein JL, Abel Y, Sheldon SB. Introduction to the Special Issue: Selected Papers from the 21st Roundtable of the International Network (INET) on School, Family, and Community Partnerships. Social Sciences. 2025; 14(10):604. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14100604
Chicago/Turabian StyleEpstein, Joyce L., Yolanda Abel, and Steven B. Sheldon. 2025. "Introduction to the Special Issue: Selected Papers from the 21st Roundtable of the International Network (INET) on School, Family, and Community Partnerships" Social Sciences 14, no. 10: 604. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14100604
APA StyleEpstein, J. L., Abel, Y., & Sheldon, S. B. (2025). Introduction to the Special Issue: Selected Papers from the 21st Roundtable of the International Network (INET) on School, Family, and Community Partnerships. Social Sciences, 14(10), 604. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14100604