“…Immigrant parents’ involvement in school is frequently misunderstood; they are characterized as uninvolved, problematic and lacking the basic competences needed to cooperate with the school staff (Dahlstedt, ; Durand and Perez, ). As immigrant parents’ attitudes toward school are largely shaped by the educational orientation in their country of origin, cultural differences between their attitudes toward child‐rearing, the learning process, and teachers’ roles and those of the teachers, may impede the interactions between immigrant parents and schools (Shor, ; Soutullo et al, , and create discontinuity between the home and school cultures (Sibley and Dearing, ). These discontinuities, which are commonly found in immigrant populations, may lead to immigrant parents’ low involvement in school, and impair immigrant students’ functioning in school (Chandler et al, ; Tagart, ).…”