When I became a principal I knew one of the things I wanted to do was make home visits. I heard positive things about them, but never did one as a teacher. My first year came and went, and I never scheduled one. Fail. My second year, I tried once with a hard to reach family and it didn’t work out. Fail. During my third year I attempted again for a child with high attendance issues. Failed again.
Now in my fourth year, one might think I should just give up. I recently read an article about Denver’s home visit program and it gave me that little push I needed to get going again. I made a call to the mom of one of our students and set up a visit. I shared with her that I just wanted to come by, bring a few books and connect with her child. We set it up and I was so excited! I couldn’t wait. As the date approached I had many thoughts running through my mind. I was nervous, worried, and questioned if it would be successful.
I showed up to the apartment and after a few minutes of waiting, the student quickly spied me as I got out of my car and she ran over. She was so excited! I will never forget that smile on her face. I sat on the floor with her and read books (mom joined us too!).
I did it! First home visit success. It was a chance for me to not only strengthen my relationship with the child, but build one with mom too. I could have given up after previous attempt had failed, but I didn't. Thankful I didn't let the feeling of failure stop me.
I reflected on my experience that day and came up with a few lessons learned:
- Just because something doesn't work the first time (or second!), keep trying. If it's meant to be, you'll find a way.
- Take opportunities to build relationships however you can.
- A home visit doesn't have to be because you're concerned, it's a chance to connect, build relationships, and show you care.
- Don't judge someone because they're child comes to school late, they don't return calls, etc. You don't know their situation.
- Every parent cares. Just because they're not doing what you want, doesn't mean they're not doing their best.
- Spend that extra time with student living then and showing them you care. Take time to try and understand. We don't know what they come home to after school.
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This made me sad for them and what they may have to experience. It was also a reminder that our students deal with things that we are oblivious to or forget a lot of the time. We are lucky enough that we have the opportunity to be a positive influence in their life. I encourage you to do a home visit to know your students better and to build stronger connections with them. I have already scheduled my second one and can’t wait to keep doing this in the future.
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