Should Teachers Visit Their Students’ Homes?

I think in certain circumstances it would be a most valuable experience for teachers to visit the homes of their students.  By doing this they will get a clearer picture about the environment in which that child lives in and unique aspects of their lifestyle.

The new chief of the Chicago public schools, Jean-Claude Brizard, suggested recently that teachers visit the homes of their students. Many people reacted to that badly, as math teacher Jason Kamras’s principal did when Kamras dropped in on his students’ apartments near Sousa Middle School in Southeast Washington.

The Sousa principal feared for his young teacher’s safety in a high-crime area. Kamras, however, found the visits invaluable. He understood his students better. Parents were more supportive. Now a D.C. schools official, Kamras is one of many educators who think unannounced visits can be worth the risk.

In the District, officials are looking at the possibility of home visits for elementary school students. The nonprofit Concentric Educational Solutions has been knocking on the doors of persistent truants for the past year. The group’s executive director and co-founder, David L. Heiber, said the visits would be even more effective if they occurred before students got into trouble. “Home visits by themselves do not correlate into academic achievement,” he said. “However, if done with academic goals and targets as the objectives, they do work.”

I commend Mr. Brizard for his brave and innovative suggestion and I’m disappointed it got so much backlash:

That thought is dismissed in many schools. Administrators such as Kamras’s principal see danger in some neighborhoods, and don’t think their staffs have the time or the energy for such after-school and weekend enterprises. “Teachers are overworked already,” Heiber said he has been told. He said administrators say that “our social workers only see our special needs students” or that “we are short staffed as it is.”

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3 Responses to “Should Teachers Visit Their Students’ Homes?”

  1. Carl D'Agostino's avatar Carl D'Agostino Says:

    This was done in Miami in the 50’s. It is not recommended actually specifically prohibited because of complications that may arise out of injury, crime and false accusations. It worked OK for me the few times I did do this because I lived in the very same neighborhood as the school and saw kids and parents at the pharmacy or grocery store or parks anyway. Invite visit my blog. Will make you laugh every day.

  2. Random Person's avatar Random Person Says:

    Besides the comment above, the other issue is the teacher is only with the child for a short period of time. I would agree that a teacher should visit a family at home. However this may also yield no results. I grew up in a family that seemed normal, yet at home my brother and I were riddled with emotional/physical abuse by our step-mother. She would never leave marks, she was way too smart for that. My father was always working and my mother didn’t care. For many years nobody even believed us until my aunt noticed. She didn’t do anything, but at least she vouched for our upbringing to the rest of the family.

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