Four decades of research and hundreds of studies have gone into proving what should be obvious to everyone: the more involved a dad is, the more successful his children will be. A father’s influence can determine a child’s social life, grades at school, and future achievements.
Involved Dads = Successful Children
These better outcomes start as early as birth: babies with more involved fathers are more likely to be emotionally secure, confident in new situations, and eager to explore their surroundings. As they grow, they are more sociable. Toddlers with involved fathers are better problem solvers and have higher IQs by age three. They are more ready to start school and can deal with the stress of being away from home all day better than children with less involved fathers.
At school, children of involved fathers do better academically. For example, a study by the U.S. Department of Education found that children of highly involved fathers were 43 percent more likely than other children to earn mostly As and 33 percent less likely to repeat a grade. They are also less likely to have behavior problems at school and are less likely to experience depression.
Girls with involved fathers have stronger self-esteem, and teenage girls who are close to their dads are less likely to become pregnant. Boys show less aggression, less impulsivity, and have more self-direction. As young adults, children of involved fathers are more likely to achieve higher levels of education, find success in their careers, have higher levels of self-acceptance, and experience psychological well-being. Adults who had involved fathers are more likely to be tolerant and understanding, have supportive social networks made up of close friends, and have long-term successful marriages.
Coparenting
Fathers who live separately from their children still have an enormous impact—for good or bad. According to a recent study, children whose fathers lived away from home but spent time with their children doing many everyday activities, such as diapering, mealtime, getting ready for school, playtime, homework, and bedtime routines, benefitted from their fathers’ involvement similarly to children whose fathers lived at home. On the other hand, “Disneyland dads,” those who are only there for fun activities and leave the parenting to Mom, do not impart such long-term benefits to their kids.
Everyday Activities Important
The kind of involvement we’re talking about here is the everyday kind: eating dinner together, watching TV, playing in the yard, playing video games. Not too difficult, right? But a study by Brigham Young University researchers finds that these kinds of leisure activities are even more important to share with Dad than big outings or trips, although those contribute to children’s development as well. Fathers and youths in the study experienced more satisfaction and cohesion in their family when fathers were involved in everyday core activities. “Although participation in balance family leisure activities is important and needed, it was fathers’ involvement in the everyday, home-based, common family leisure activities that held more weight than the large, extravagant, out-of-the-ordinary types of activities when examining family functioning,” the authors said.
Different Approaches
But how does a father’s influence differ from a mother’s? Isn’t one good parent enough? Brett Copeland, a clinical psychologist in Tacoma, Washington, said, “Fathers and mothers have unique and complementary roles in the home. Fathers encourage competition, independence, and achievement. Mothers encourage equity, security, and collaboration.” W. Bradford Wilcox of the University of Virginia contends that fathers’ special input differs from mothers’ in at least four ways: playing, encouraging risk, protecting, and disciplining.
Rough Play
When he asked parents of 390 families how they play with their children, psychologist Ross Parke found that “in infants and toddlers, fathers’ hallmark style of interaction is physical play that is characterized by arousal, excitement, and unpredictability.” Mothers, on the other hand, were “more modulated and less arousing” in their play. This became glaringly obvious to me when my husband left home for a year and a half to work in Afghanistan. My modulated play was not cutting it. Several months into the experience, our three kids began complaining to me, “You never tickle us.” I had to take a page from my husband’s playbook for a while.
A manual from the U.S. Children’s Bureau explains the impact of fathers’ play this way: “From these interactions, children learn how to regulate their feelings and behavior. Roughhousing with dad, for example, can teach children how to deal with aggressive impulses and physical contact without losing control of their emotions.”
Encouraging Risk
Where mothers worry about their children’s safety and well-being, fathers tend to encourage their children to take risks. Psychologist Daniel Paquette’s review of scholarly research found that dads are more likely to encourage their children to overcome obstacles, to talk to strangers, and to go in the deep end during swim lessons. One study in the review focused on a group of parents teaching their children how to swim. It found that “fathers tend to stand behind their children so the children face their social environment, whereas mothers tend to position themselves in front of their children, seeking to establish visual contact with the children.”
A 2012 Brigham Young University study found that persistence in adolescents is learned from fathers who practice good parenting. The teens of good fathers in the 325 families who were studied also experienced lower delinquency and more success in school.
Protecting
Perhaps it’s their size, strength, or inclination to protect, but fathers appear to be better at keeping predators and bad influences from harming their children. Psychologist Rob Palkovitz noted, “Paternal absence has been cited by multiple scholars as the single greatest risk factor in teen pregnancy for girls” (cited in the Atlantic). When fathers are more involved, they can better monitor what’s going on in their children’s lives, including what peers and adults the children interact with.
Discipline
Although mothers discipline more often, fathers discipline with a firmer hand. In their book Partnership Parenting, Drs. Kyle Pruett and Marsha Kline Pruett write, “Fathers tend to be more willing than mothers to confront their children and enforce discipline, leaving their children with the impression that they in fact have more authority.” Mothers, on the other hand, try to reason with their children and rely on their emotional attachment to influence their behavior. Although Mom and Dad may not seem to be on the same page, this diverse approach can be very effective in disciplining children.
The good news about being a dad is that you don’t have to be spectacular at it to make a big positive contribution to your children’s lives. W. Bradford Wilcox looked at data on delinquency, pregnancy, and depression in adolescents and compared the statistics with how the teens rated their fathers or if they lived with a single mother. He found that outcomes for teens in single-mother homes were about the same as those living with both a mother and a poor-quality father. But teens living with both a mother and a father with whom they had an average-quality relationship experienced much lower delinquency, pregnancy, and depression. Teens who had a high-quality relationship with their father had lower rates still. Wilcox concludes that “great, and even good-enough dads, appear to make a real difference in their children’s lives.”
So dads, if you feel you are not making a positive difference in your kids’ lives, you’re probably wrong. If you spend time with your kids, if you’re not too strict or heavy handed, and if you love them, you are just what they need.
Comments