|
1.
|
Start a Local Education Fund, a community-based nonprofit organization whose mission is to create high-quality public schools for all children (for more information call the Public Education Network at 202-628-7460).
|
|
2.
|
Read a book aloud to a child every month for a year.
|
|
3.
|
Visit your local public school.
|
|
4.
|
Sit on a committee to improve your public schools.
|
|
5.
|
Lead a team of citizens to clean up litter on school grounds.
|
|
6.
|
Vote in your local school board elections and on bond referenda.
|
|
7.
|
Attend your local school board meetings.
|
|
8.
|
Donate computer equipment to a local school.
|
|
9.
|
Invite a student to dinner in your home.
|
|
10.
|
Tutor or mentor a student.
|
|
11.
|
Provide learning opportunities outside the school day -- take a student to the theater, to a museum, to the park.
|
|
12.
|
Show how reading, science, history are important in these places.
|
|
13.
|
Learn about school financing and how your money is spent in your schools.
|
|
14.
|
Teach a new skill to a youngster.
|
|
15.
|
Learn CPR and First Aid.
|
|
16.
|
Volunteer to chaperone at a public school function.
|
|
17.
|
Help a child with his or her homework.
|
|
18.
|
Support with work, wealth, and wisdom local organizations, like local education funds, that support the creation of high-quality public schools for all children.
|
|
19.
|
Compliment a child for their effort in working on a difficult subject.
|
|
20.
|
Obey traffic signals and laws around school grounds.
|
|
21.
|
Introduce yourself to teachers and school administrators at your child’s school, or the school in your neighborhood, and ask how you can be of service.
|
|
22.
|
Don’t take illegal drugs.
|
|
23.
|
Ask questions of your elected and appointed school officials.
|
|
24.
|
Report suspected abuse to the proper authorities.
|
|
25.
|
Write a thank you letter to a teacher who was important to you.
|
|
26.
|
Walk or drive a child to school.
|
|
27.
|
Stop for school buses.
|
|
28.
|
Make sure that children’s basic needs are met so that they can arrive at school ready to learn at high levels.
|
|
29.
|
Limit television viewing and monitor the content of what your child watches.
|
|
30.
|
Protect a vulnerable child.
|
|
31.
|
Ask any teacher how you can help them do a better job.
|
|
32.
|
Write letters to local, state, and national leaders demanding funds for protecting the health, education, and welfare of children.
|
|
33.
|
Employ public school students at your organization or business.
|
|
34.
|
Offer job-shadowing and summer job opportunities to public school students.
|
|
35.
|
Organize a community career day for middle school or high school students.
|
|
36.
|
Encourage intuitive, caring, and highly-motivated college students to become teachers.
|
|
37.
|
Make sure your child is fully immunized.
|
|
38.
|
Donate books to your local public school library.
|
|
39.
|
Treat other people’s children as if they were your own.
|
|
40.
|
Report any gang activity in your neighborhood.
|
|
41.
|
Believe that all children can learn at high levels.
|
|
42.
|
Support nutritious free and reduced price school lunches for children in your community.
|
|
43.
|
Take a child to the theater or a museum.
|
|
44.
|
Demonstrate fairness and consistency in your dealings with students.
|
|
45.
|
Teach a child to celebrate, appreciate, and tolerate differences in skin color, physical mobility, learning ability, and economic opportunity.
|
|
46.
|
Attend and support public school social, athletic, and artistic functions.
|
|
47.
|
Have your school checked for asbestos, lead, and radon levels.
|
|
48.
|
Make sure that a child you care about has regular visits to the doctor and dentist.
|
|
49.
|
Find out where your elected officials stand and have voted on the issues that influence the quality of public schools.
|
|
50.
|
Organize a day to paint and repair a school
|