The literature on research carried out in the field and parents\u2019 and teach- ers\u2019 declarations all point in the same direction: good collaboration be- tween home and school is useful to the child-student for his education and learning. Despite this, parent-teacher relationships in Europe (and elsewhere), from Spain to Sweden, from Ireland to Greece, and from Italy to the Czech Republic, represent an unresolved issue. This is a com- plex relationship that calls into play various social spheres: macro (so- cial), intermediary (institutional) and micro (relational); in fact, there are as many diverse realities as there are schools. In Europe, the relation- ship between individual behaviours (parents vs. teachers), social orien- tations (neoliberalism) and institutional frameworks (school markets) appears significant: scarce parental participation, lack of adequate forms of home-school communications, and the need to make investments in parent and teacher training. Nevertheless, family and school are called on to create a dialogue in order to contribute to the processes of training new generations. They both need each other in order to carry out that task in the best way. This paper presents and discusses the results of a theoretical analysis conducted on the basis of the international litera- ture concerning research on the school-family relationship, with par- ticular attention on the situation of different European countries, and concludes with suggestions for some practical improvements