The ROI of Family Engagement: Partnerships that Pay

In a world of competing priorities: improving grades, closing opportunity gaps, and helping students achieve their full potential, family engagement can seem like a “nice to have,” something extra, if there’s time.
But research tells a different story: investing in family engagement isn’t just good practice: it delivers measurable returns, especially when it comes to improving attendance. But before you start literally paying families for good attendance, read on for the research and sustainable strategies that strengthen family-school partnerships and nurture student success.
Family Engagement and Attendance: The Evidence Is Clear
A growing body of research shows that when schools build strong partnerships with families, student attendance significantly improves.
Here are some of the key findings:
- Students whose families receive personalized attendance messages miss fewer days of school.
In a large-scale randomized controlled trial, researchers found that families who received simple, personalized messages about their child’s absences saw an 11–15% reduction in absences compared to the control group. - Engagement matters even more for students at higher risk.
Targeted family communication had the biggest impact on students with the lowest prior attendance, helping to reduce chronic absenteeism where it matters most. - Trust builds consistency.
Schools with higher levels of family trust and communication are more likely to see regular attendance, especially during periods of transition or disruption. Our partners in Richmond Public Schools also have seen this positive impact firsthand, and share more about this research and their strategies in this webinar.
What Does Effective Family Engagement Look Like?
Not all engagement is equally impactful. The most effective approaches share a few key features:
Personalized
Messages that speak directly to a family’s student and their specific attendance history are more powerful than generic reminders. Given that families often underestimate their student’s attendance, getting an accurate report can be especially enlightening.
Supportive, Not Punitive
Research shows that families are more likely to respond to messages that emphasize partnership and offer help rather than judgment or consequences.
Culturally and Linguistically Relevant
Outreach that reflects a family’s home language and cultural context fosters trust and inclusion.
Frequent and Consistent
One call home won’t move the needle. Sustained, multi-touch communication throughout the year reinforces expectations and shows that the school and its educators care.
Our partner Paul Milford, Coordinator of Social Work Services at the School District of Lee County, Florida, emphasizes that “Any expectation that we have of students and families has to be communicated and reinforced to them. Sometimes we forget that setting the expectation that attendance is an important part of student success…We have to take the initiative to make sure that they're being communicated to about attendance and then we can set the interventions in place to support those improved attendance behaviors.”
The ROI: Why It’s Worth the Investment
Even modest investments in family engagement can yield substantial returns on attendance and student outcomes. In fact, recent research shows that personalized family outreach strategies used to improve attendance can be more cost-effective than many other common education interventions, like mentoring and tutoring, when it comes to increasing instructional time. Dr. Karen Mapp, Family Engagement expert weighs in on the impact of family engagement on academic achievement here.
For districts funded based on Average Daily Attendance (ADA), improving attendance also brings direct financial returns—in addition to academic and equity gains.
Even outside of ADA states, the payoff is clear: stronger family-school relationships equates to fewer lost learning days and improved student outcomes. You can further explore the ROI of better attendance here.
How District Leaders Can Maximize the Impact
- Prioritize family engagement in attendance strategies
Make family communication a core part of your attendance improvement plan—not an afterthought. Our partners at Pflugerville ISD, Texas have taken this approach and seen impressive attendance gains. - Invest in tools and systems that scale outreach
Think reports from your SIS are enough for effective family engagement? Consider how much more efficient it would be to have technology that helps your teams reach families quickly, without sacrificing personalization. In addition to a partner or platform sending attendance communications on your behalf, this could also look like strategic outreach around the holidays or celebratory messages when students are on a positive attendance streak. - Train staff on effective family engagement
Equip principals, teachers, and attendance teams with the tools to communicate to families with empathy and impact. Dr. Karen Mapp’s Dual Capacity-Building Framework is a great place to start, and she shares tips for applying it to family conversations here. - Set measurable goals
Track attendance improvements tied to family engagement efforts and share success stories across your district to keep the momentum going!
The Bottom Line
Family engagement isn’t a nice-to-have. It’s a proven, cost-effective lever for reducing chronic absenteeism and improving student success. The districts that are winning the fight against absenteeism aren’t doing it alone—they’re doing it with families.
When we invest in family connection, we don’t just improve attendance—we strengthen the foundation for learning, belonging, and thriving.
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