Joyce Epstein: Apply research. Engage families. Change Society.

When Joyce Epstein founded the National Network of Partnership Schools (NNPS), the notion that schools and families must work together to help students learn was itself a bold idea. Fast-forward 25 years and we find an NNPS that has assisted more than 5,000 schools—and several hundred districts and educational organizations—plan, implement, and continually improve their partnership programs.
Never have those partnerships proven more valuable than during the two years of the COVID-19 pandemic. In their latest research, Epstein and colleagues found that the schools and districts that were already implementing research-based partnership programs before the pandemic were able to accomplish more than those that began their programs after the onset of COVID-19—but that’s not a reason never to start. Any partnership is better than no partnership at all.
Epstein’s mission is to spread the “truism” that family and community engagement matters more than ever—especially during times of crisis. She asserts that when districts and schools use research-based tools and approaches to strengthen programs and practices, they are more likely to implement policies that engage all families as partners in improving their children’s education.
To do that, schools and policy makers must lift research out of the journals, develop programs based on solid evidence, and get those programs into the schools with purpose. That rising tide will lift all boats. The strong will get stronger, and even those less strong will gain in strength.
Epstein’s boldest idea of all, however, is to never give up. Progress may be incremental, but it can and should be continuous—one year’s work strengthens the next, she promises.

COVID put family engagement on the front burner. The digital divide—students with and without computers—remains a monumental challenge. Students with engaged families do better.
Joyce L. Epstein, PhD
Professor
Director, National Network of Partnership Schools (NNPS)
NEWS

NETWORK OF PARTNERSHIP SCHOOLS TURNS 25
If it takes a village to raise a child, it takes a national network of schools to educate America’s children. Against that backdrop, the National Network of Partnership Schools marks 25 years of engaging schools and families—and other members in the network—in the social process of learning.

EDUCATION IN FOCUS
Joyce Epstein, a sociologist, studies school, family, and community partnerships as a component of school organization. “Students with engaged families do better,” she says, so the “real” question is how all schools can use research-based approaches to engage all parents and increase student success.
MENTIONS

STRONGER SCHOOL-PARENT PARTNERSHIPS
Researchers from the National Network of Partnership Schools asked educators how they responded to challenges of COVID-19 and found “silver linings” in parents’ engagement that should strengthen partnership programs as schools reopen. “[S]chools and families performed near-miracles to reimagine ‘education,’” they write.

FLEXIBLE SCHEDULES AND FLEXIBLE THINKING
The 2020-21 school year called for flexible thinking, customized schedules, and quick decisions in districts, schools, and families. The 2022 NNPS Annual Report weighs in on how the continuation of COVID in affected the quality of family and community engagement programs.

WEBINAR FOR DISTRICTS, ORGANIZATIONS, AND SCHOOLS
NNPS experts Joyce Epstein and Steve Sheldon cover the latest best-in-practice leadership and facilitation strategies for effective school, family, and community partnership programs in this recent webinar.

NATIONAL NETWORK OF PARTNERSHIP SCHOOLS
Bold Ideas
At the Johns Hopkins School of Education, our research builds on evidence in new and dynamic ways to bring practical, scalable ideas to education’s foremost challenges.