Parent Center

The purpose of the Parent Center is to assist parents in working more effectively with their children at home and to encourage positive home-school relationships.
Goals for Parental Involvement:
- To inform parents of the availability of Title 1 programs.
- To support the efforts of paents to work with their children at home
- To train parents to work with their children on skills required for promotion.
- To consult with parents on an ongoing basis and give parents a feeling to partnership in the education of their children.
- To provide a wide range of opportunitites for parental participation in the design of the Title 1 Program.
- To ensure opportunities for full participation of parents with language differences or who lack literacy skills.

Overview:
- The Parent Center serves parents of Pre-K through 5th grade students.
- Materials, equipment and information are provided to families free of charge. (Home delivery is available to families without transportation.)
- The center offers electronic games, books, videos, cassettes, puzzles, manipulatives, bingo and board games, flashcards, worksheets, and other other educational matierlas.
- Two parent liasions are available to parents and schools to facilitate open lines of communication between home and school.
- Assistance with understanding state testing and test results are avilable as well as practice test items.
- A title 1 online newsletter, “Today’s Tips for Parents”, with daily updates accessible through out website.
CONTACT INFORMATION
Office Location:
720 E Plaquemine Street
Jennings, LA 70546
Office Hours: Monday – Friday, 7:30 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. (School Hours)
Monday – Friday, 7:30 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. (Summer Hours)
Closed Daily for Lunch (12:00-1:00)
Phone Number: 337-824-0597
FAX Number: 337-824-4112
The Title I Parent Center and your Title I Parent Liaison can be your most valuable academic resource for your child!
A parent liaison is a person who works to bridge the communication between school and home by helping parents get the information, help and support they need to ensure their child’s academic and social success in school.
We hope by working together (parents, teachers, students, and parent liaison) and using various resources we can help assist students in strengthening the specific skills they need in order to be successful in the classroom.


Parents make the difference!
This newsletter provides practical, proven information for parents on a comprehensive array of school success topics.
Check out the many different ideas and suggestions for parents and students to enhance their learning at home and at school.
Be sure to check out #10 Study Skills. What Study Skill will you suggest to your child today?
You can find your School Succes Library in you Ideas for Parents newsletter.
Click on Today’s Tips for Parents above to see todays tip!
You can also get to todays tip by click on Tip of the Day found at the bottom of the Ideas for Parents newsletter
Articles for Parents to Help Children Succeed in School
- Six Great Ways to Spend Time with Young Children
- Is Your Child Slow in Developing Speech?
- Eye-to-Eye Approach Helps Improve Communication
- Get Ready for School with Immunizations
- Dinner's a Good Time to Cook Up New Words
- Can You Recognize Signs That Your Child May Need Help?
- Every Child Should Have These Motor Skills
- Parents Can Make Math Fun for Preschoolers
- Show Your Toddler How to Share
- Help Young Children Learn to Love Reading
- What Should Parents Do When Young Children Lie?
- Helping Others Teaches Children Responsibility
- Test Your Knowledge of Child Development
- Responsibility Means Accepting Consequences
- Three Ways to Help Children Develop Responsible Habits
- Don't Do for Children What They Can Do for Themselves
- Parents Can Help Children Become Responsible Citizens
- Help Children Learn to Make Responsible Decisions
- Responsible Money Management Can Be Taught at Home
- Help Your Child Resist Procrastinating About Chores
- How Does Your Child Rate on This Responsibility Quiz?
- Three Steps for Teaching Children to Accept Responsibility
- Turning Over Responsibility to Children Shows Respect
- Parental Involvement Vital to Children's Success
- Help Your Child Strive for Perfect Attendance
- Parents Can Help Children Make Friends
- Parents Can Help If Their Child Is Having a Problem in School
- Know How Your Child Learns
- Have a Successful Parent-Teacher Conference
- Help Your Child Stay Calm and Confident on Test Days
- Make Homework Time More Productive
- When Should You Call the Teacher?
- These "Basics" Make Learning Possible...And They're All Learned at Home
- Avoid Five Pitfalls of Working Parents
- Kids Need Parents to Be Their Parents . . . Not Their Friends
- Easy, Firm or Tough—Which Produces the Best Students?
- You Can Say 'No' to Children Without Feeling Guilty
- Five Great Ways to Boost Your Parent Power
- Five More Great Ways to Boost Your Parent Power
- Expect Elementary-Aged Children To Do Some Chores
- How to Tell If You—Or Your Children Are in Charge
- Be Careful Not to Put Too Much Pressure on Your Child
- How Parents Can Avoid Being Manipulated by Children
- How to Talk So Kids Will Listen . . . and Talk . . . to You
- Does Your Child Really Know That You Love Him?
- How to Get Help When You Need It
- Schools, Parents Must Work Together to Prevent Violence
- Parents Can Help Teachers, Children Keep Schools Safe
- What Causes Violence and What Does It Do to Children?
- Parents Can Help Combat Bad Effects of TV Violence
- Teach Your Child How to Put an End to Bullying at School
- Teach Your Child the Skills to Help Resolve Normal Conflicts
- The Do's and Don'ts of Problem Solving
- How One Parent Put an End to Name Calling
- Teach Your Child How to Be Safe All Through the Year
- What Can Parents Do About Violence?
- Simple Activities Will Help Build Reading Skills
- Books with Good Beginnings Will Excite Reluctant Readers
- Five Reasons Kids Don't Read—And How To Overcome Them
- Five Ways To Get Kids Excited About Reading
- Help Your Child Practice Reading Aloud
- How to Help When Your Child Doesn't Know a Word
- Active Children Need Reading Materials Handy
- Students Can Learn to Find Main Ideas When They Read
- Put Reading and Writing at the Heart of Your Home
- Read Children's Books Yourself
- Playing 'Firsts & Lasts' Helps Reinforce Phonics, Spelling
- Look for Books With Newbery and Caldecott Medals
- Newbery Medal Winners
- Caldecott Medal Winners
- Have Fun One-on-One
- Quality Time Is Fine, But Children Need a Lot of It
- A Dozen Activities That Teach Respect
- Activities That Promote Honesty
- Activities That Teach Patience
- Activities That Teach Perseverance
- Activities That Teach Tolerance
- Spend Time Learning to Follow Directions
- Family Meetings Teach Cooperation, Communication
- Parents and Kids Can Practice Listening
- Four Things That Will Make Any Child Successful
- Try Incentives and Rewards
- Prevent Procrastination
- Help Your Child to Set Goals That Challenge and Motivate
- Help Your Child Overcome These Barriers to Success
- Emphasize These "A's" and "B's"
- Teach Your Child the 'Success Secret' of Hard Work
- Kids Need to Hear These Three Messages
- Help Your Child Develop an 'I Can Do It' Attitude
- When Your Child and the Teacher Don't Get Along
- How Parents Can Motivate Children to Succeed:
- Build Children's Self-Confidence to Help Them Succeed
- Give Children a Taste of Success to Help Them Succeed
- Help Children Develop Their Talents to Help Them Succeed
- Help Children Learn Persistence to Help Them Succeed
- Parents Can Nurture Children's Desire to Learn
- Disciplining with Respect
- Be Firm, Fair & Consistent
- Here's How to Stop Whining
- Set Up Routines
- What to Do When Children Challenge Your Authority
- Tried-and-True Tricks of the Trade for Dealing with Defiant Behavior
- Ending Power Struggles: How to Get Kids to Accept Control Willingly
- I Don't Love Your Behavior, But I Do Love You'
- Do Any of These Discipline Mistakes Sound Familiar?
- Parents Must Set the Stage for Self-Discipline
- Recognize and Tame Temper Tantrums Quickly
- Get Into the Homework Habit
- Organize Assignments Right Away
- Set Up a Study Spot
- Don't Make These Study Mistakes
- Stick with a Study Routine
- Plan Projects Step by Step
- Notes Make Listening More Productive
- Making Memorizing Easier
- A Craftsman Can't Work Without the Right Tools
- Step-by-Step Method Helps Students Study for Tests
Welcome to your Eureka Math Parent Help!
Click on the grade level below to navigate through the Modules and Topics your need additional information on.
You will find Parent Tip, Eureka Newsletters, lesson videos, etc.
Eureka Math Parent Guides (Louisiana Believes) Scroll towards the bottom of the page to access grade level and module number.
We have spent a large amount of time and effort to update and provide a web site that is user friendly as well as providing essential and useful information to parents.
What is a Title I Parent Liaison?
A parent liaison is a person who works to bridge the communication between school and home by helping parents get the information, help and support they need to ensure their child’s academic and social success in school.
We hope by working together (parents, teachers, students, and parent liaison) and using various resources we can help assist students in strengthening the specific skills they need in order to be successful in the classroom.
If you are interested in requesting the assistance of our parent liaison, please call the Parent Center at 824-0597 and ask to speak with the parent liaison or you can click on the link below and complete the online form and someone will reach out to you.
Supply List
- Laminator - small & regular (27 in. wide) - .50/foot
- Laminator – large (36 in. wide) – 1.00/foot
- Roll Paper - .50/foot
While Supplies Last
- Single Sheet of Color Paper - .04/sheet
- Sheet of Cardstock Paper - .05/sheet
- Poster Boards - $1.25
- Plastic Comb and Thermal Binding priced according to size (.20 to 1.55)
Tools Available free of charge
- Di-Cut
- Table Top Paper Cutter (small & large)
- Heat Press (large)
- Paper/Program Folder
- Overhead Projectors
- Unibind Thermal Binding Heating Unit
- Plastic Comb Ring Binder
