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Hot Diggity Dog

New ways to navigate our school journey, TOGETHER

We want to build rapport with the community, a relationship and trust. How to get parents to engage given barriers like transportation, working and other activities is the challenge. Our goal is to reach the parents who aren’t easily reachable. Those who are uncomfortable reaching out... maybe they had a bad experience themselves in school.

Overview

Information on this page is provided by the innovator and has not been evaluated by HundrED.

Web presence

2022

Established

-

Children

1

Countries
Target group
Parents
Updated
November 2023
Administration is seen as "this cloud above." We need to build rapport with families, know we're on the same level and all here for the same thing - the advancement of our students.

About the innovation

Why did you create this innovation?

Typically, kindergarten orientation had school staff front and center, giving information to the parents. Similarly, parents had been left out of their child's transition to middle school. We want to create opportunities for parents to be able to ask their questions, for teachers to get to know their families and to make conversation two-way and the seeds of trust.

What does your innovation look like in practice?

We improved upon an event that already exists: kindergarten orientation. In the past it had been largely informational. Teachers presented and parents listened. We wanted to switch the dynamic and convey to parents that we wanted to learn from them. The superintendent grilled hot dogs and that sent an entirely new message: We are here to enjoy each other as people. In this more relaxed atmosphere, parents met other parents and their child's teacher, and met each other in comfortable and more personal ways. The teachers were the listeners, learning about the hopes and dreams that parents had for their children.

How has it been spreading?

We are excited that our family-school engagement work will start to expand to the high school. In the spring we followed Hot Diggity Dog with a revamped middle school orientation. Transitioning students AND their parents participated in a one-hour, low-key evening of food, walks through classrooms and comfort building in the new setting. Teachers like the new approaches to kindergarten and middle school transitions. In its second year of implementation, Hot Diggity Dog more than doubled participation, from 70 to 180 parents. Importantly, our school team will keep asking how we can help and continue having fun through the journey.

If I want to try it, what should I do?

Get to know your team first, get to know each other and just talk. This is how we built rapport and a common vision — the advancement of our students. And, we have learned to constantly ask, "What can we do that helps the school community?," and taken our lead from the parents we survey or hear from. Planning realistically is crucial too. It's ok to start small and let something grow.

Spread of the innovation

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