ABSTRACT

Dissatisfied with the effects of schooling on children from low-income families, Doreen Grant left her post as head of a secondary school in Liverpool and turned to research for solutions to this perennial social problem. This is a popular account of her involvement with under-privileged Glaswegian parents and children, and her attempt to address the problem of underachievement from the perspective of the home rather than the educational establishment.

Combining the theory of international scholars such as Brofenbrenner, Bruner, Donaldson and Freire with practical experience, Doreen Grant indicates the improvements in children’s active learning when parents participate fully in the process of education.

Learning Relations, first published in 1989, describes the creation of a coherent learning environment in the inner city: as parents gain confidence in their personal vocation as natural educators, it becomes clear that they are not only willing but fully capable of improving their children’s chances of success.

chapter |8 pages

The problem of mismatch

chapter |14 pages

‘Stairhead seminars'

chapter |6 pages

As others see us

chapter |11 pages

Learning to listen

chapter |8 pages

The other foot forward

chapter |11 pages

Experience-based learning

chapter |12 pages

Shared awakening

chapter |10 pages

Partnership in preparation

chapter |10 pages

The watershed

chapter |6 pages

Towards a working model

chapter |9 pages

Risking reality

chapter |10 pages

Learning to relate

chapter |10 pages

Seeds for the city