See for yourself why thousands of schools have chosen Edline’s website and portal solution to meet their online communication needs.
New technologies are making it possible for schools to increase parental involvement, raise student achievement, and transform their learning community.
Edline offers web hosting, content management, information portals, and tools for classroom management, gradebook, notification, analytics, virtual storage and related technologies.
“As a district, we feel that this is one of our biggest parent-involvement tools. We may not be able to get you to the school very often, physically, but this is one of the ways we can reach out to parents and keep them informed about their children”
See a live demonstration of Edline’s enterprise-class gradebook solution, GradeQuick.
Decades of academic research has established the significant impact of parent involvement on improving school performance and raising student achievement.
December 7, 2007 // Report on Edline - Pilot year
Even though this was a 'pilot' year, the usefulness of the program quickly became evident to many teachers, students and parents.
October 1, 2007 // Are Private High Schools better Academically than Public High Schools?
The study found that low-income students from urban public high schools did as well academically and on long-term indicators as their peers from private high schools, once key background family characteristics were considered.
June 7, 2007 // What happened to the Village - Parents and Community as partners in Education - Dr. Blondean Davis, Superintendent Matteson District 162 - Chicago Urban League
Two-way communication between teacher and parent can resolve many problems and enable them to work together to help the child do better in school.
April 11, 2004 // Web Links Teachers, Students, Parents
With a few clicks of her laptop mouse, the eighth-grader at Miami's Palmer Trinity School can easily track down that homework assignment or any others she might have missed.
January 1, 2002 // A New Wave of Evidence - The impact of school, family and community connections on student achievement
When schools build partnerships with families that respond to their concerns and honor their contributions, they are successful in sustaining connections that are aimed at improving student achievement.
January 1, 2001 // Efforts by Public K-8 Schools to Involve Parents in Children's Education
Research over the last two decades has demonstrated that children whose parents are involved are more likely than other youth to have positive educational outcomes such as improved academic performance, better school attendance, higher aspirations, reduced dropout rates, and increased graduation rates.