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Communicating with working parents

Ways to communicate effectively with working parents

Some parents are very restricted with the amount of spare time they have during the day due to the demands of their jobs; this can cause some barriers to communication. Some children in the early years may be dropped off as soon as the setting opens and picked up literally as it closes. This can sometimes make creating strong parent partnerships challenging and sometimes in-depth feedback is not possible.

For this reason, it is important that practitioners find more effective way to communicate with these working parents. Using alternative methods of communication are also useful when reminding parents about important news, upcoming events, and notices. This ensures all parents are receiving messages directly, and important information isn’t being lost in transition for example grandparents pick up and forget to pass messages on to parents.

Sending messages in a variety of ways means parents can choose the option that is best for them and the most effective way to contact them. It also enables practitioners to quickly send messages which are not urgent but do need addressing such as a child may need more nappies bringing into the setting or a new tub of sun cream. It is easy for busy working parents and other parents to forget these when they a briefly verbally communicated so having it sent in an alternative way means there is a more permanent reminder.

New ways to communicate with parents

There are many new ways practitioners can communicate with parents about many different aspects of the early years from general notices to individual routines and development. Some of this include:

There are many ways to communicate with parents in the early years even if there is limited time to verbally communicate. You may choose to give the parents in your setting a choice as to the way they would prefer to be communicated with. This way you are meeting all the needs of individuals children, families and parents.

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