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Explaining Behavior Tracking to Parents: First Week Communication
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Explaining Behavior Tracking to Parents: First Week Communication

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Dr. Sarah Mitchell
Board Certified Behavior Analyst
August 18, 2025
8 min read
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Partnership from Day One

Parents are your most important partners in behavior support. How you introduce tracking in the first week shapes whether they see you as ally or adversary.

Framing Matters

Avoid This Framing

  • "We need to document your child's behaviors"
  • "There have been some concerns"
  • "We are tracking problems"
  • "Your child has been..."

Use This Framing

  • "I want to understand how to best support your child"
  • "Data helps me see what is working"
  • "I am tracking progress toward goals"
  • "Your insights will help me help your child"

First Week Parent Contact

Introductory Contact (Days 1-3)

Brief positive introduction. Share something specific you noticed about their child. Mention you are establishing baseline data to support their success.

Information Gathering (Days 3-5)

Ask: What helps your child succeed? What should I watch for? What worked well last year? Position yourself as learner.

Communication Plan (End of Week 1)

Establish how and when you will communicate. Daily notes? Weekly summaries? Preferred contact method? Set expectations early.

Explaining Data Collection

When parents ask why you are collecting behavior data:

Key Messages

  • "Data helps me see patterns" - I can identify what triggers challenges and what helps
  • "Data shows progress" - Even small improvements become visible over time
  • "Data guides decisions" - I adjust my approach based on what works, not guessing
  • "Data supports your child" - IEP teams need evidence to provide appropriate services

What to Share vs. What to Hold

Share Regularly Share Thoughtfully
Progress toward goalsRaw incident counts without context
Strategies that are workingComparisons to other students
Positive observationsEvery minor incident
What you are tryingSpeculation about causes

Parents Want the Same Thing You Do

Remember: parents want their child to succeed. When you approach them as partners working toward the same goal, data becomes a shared tool rather than a threat. Start the year as allies.

Take Action

Put what you've learned into practice with these resources.

Key Takeaways

  • Lead with partnership, not problems
  • Explain the WHY of data collection, not just the what
  • Emphasize that data helps you help their child
  • Establish regular communication rhythm from the start
  • Ask for their input and observations

Ready to Transform Your Classroom?

See how Classroom Pulse can help you streamline behavior data collection and support student outcomes.

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About the Author

D
Dr. Sarah Mitchell
Board Certified Behavior Analyst

Dr. Sarah Mitchell consists of former Special Education Teachers and BCBAs who are passionate about leveraging technology to reduce teacher burnout and improve student outcomes.

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Explaining Behavior Tracking to Parents | First Week Communication Guide