Parents as Teachers (PAT) is an international, early childhood, parent education and family support program serving families from pregnancy until their children enter kindergarten. PAT targets families from all socioeconomic backgrounds and from rural, urban, and suburban communities. The program is designed to enhance child development and school achievement through parent education accessible to all families. It adapts to fit the needs of the community.
Certified parent educators conduct personal visits, using a curriculum with the latest neuroscience research findings to offer practical ideas on ways to enhance parenting knowledge. Parents also meet in groups to discuss such topics as positive discipline, sleep, sibling rivalry, and toilet learning and to promote parent–child interaction through activities such as story reading and play.
The program offers periodic developmental screening and provides links to community resources. It has also been adapted for center-based providers and special populations (teen parents, parents of children with special needs, reservation-based Native Americans, homeless families, military-based families, and incarcerated/probation/paroled parents).
The PAT program has been independently evaluated several times using a randomized control design. One evaluation involved 665 children and families. Of these, 15.5 percent were recruited prenatally, while the remaining children were between 1 and 8 months old. All were asked to participate through the child’s 3rd birthday. The sample was 58.2 percent African-American, 29.4 percent white, and 12.4 percent other ethnicities. The families were randomly assigned to the PAT program (n=275) or the control group (n=390). In addition to being assessed at baseline, parents were assessed at the child’s 1st and 2nd birthdays and children were assessed only at their 2nd birthday. Attrition was high. The first assessment included 53 percent of the treatment group and 50.5 percent of the control group. The second assessment included 39 percent of the treatment group and 41 percent of the control group. The parent assessment involved measures of parental knowledge, attitudes toward parenting, and parenting behaviors. The child assessment measured development and behaviors.
Other evaluations include the PAT Pilot Project, which involved 75 randomly selected first-time parents with 3-year-old children. The comparison group was selected from pilot PAT school district sites that did not participate in PAT. The statewide implementation of PAT in Missouri included 400 randomly selected families in 37 Missouri school districts. The study oversampled children at risk. Finally, SRI International evaluated PAT with 113 predominantly Hispanic families in Salinas, Calif. Of these, 67 were randomly assigned to PAT and 46 to a control group.
Independent evaluations of the PAT program found the following:
Drazen, Shelley M., and Mary Haust. 1994. Increasing Children’s Readiness for School by a Parental Education Program. Binghamton, N.Y.: Community Resource Center.
Pfannenstiel, J.C.; T. Lambson; and V. Yarnell. 1991. Second Wave Study of the Parents as Teachers Program. Overland, Kan.: Research and Training Associates.
———. 1995. The Effects of the Parents and Children Together Program on School Achievement. Binghamton, N.Y.: Community Resource Center.
———. 1996. Lasting Academic Gains From a Home Visitations Program. Binghamton, N.Y.: Community Resource Center.
Pfannenstiel, J.C., and D.A. Seltzer. 1985. Evaluation Report: New Parents As Teachers Project. Overland, Kan.: Research and Training Associates.
Wagner, M. 1992. Home the First Classroom: A Pilot Evaluation of the Northern California Parents as Teachers Project. Menlo Park, Calif.: SRI International.
———. 1993. Evaluation of the National City Parents as Teachers Programs. Menlo Park, Calif.: SRI International.
Wagner, M.; D. Spiker; and M.I. Linn. 2002. “The Effectiveness of the Parents as Teachers Program With Low-Income Parents and Children.” Topics in Early Childhood Special Education 22(2):67–81.
Attn: Public Information Specialist
Parents as Teachers National Center, Inc.
2228 Ball Drive
St. Louis, MO 63146
Phone: (866) 728-4968
Fax: (314) 432-8963
E-mail: info@patnc.org
Web site: http://www.parentsasteachers.org