Today, fathers are expected
to take on multiple roles, including being participants in classroom activities
and school meetings and events. With Father's Day just around the corner,
Education World offers ways to help fathers connect beyond the traditional
back-to-school night and parent-teacher conferences.
Included: Books for dads and kids to read together!
"Today's fathers are being challenged to alter their parenting roles
to accommodate new norms for fathering. ... Fathers, like mothers, are
expected to take on multiple roles: provider, nurturer, caregiver, teacher
and instiller of family values."
-- Andrew V. Beale, Ed.D., professor of counselor education,
at Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond
Source: Professional School Counseling (American
School Counselor Association), October 1999
THE CHANGING ROLE OF FATHERS -- THREE EXAMPLES
Homework? -- Help! According to a 1998 Census Bureau Report, the number of single fathers has grown
25 percent, from 1.7 million in 1995 to 2.1 million in 1998. Men now comprise
one-sixth of the nation's 11.9 million single parents. Mike Gowan is one
of those dads. He is learning to cope with his multiple parenting roles.
He admits, though, that sometimes the homework assignments his children
bring home defeat him.
Books
for Dads and Kids!
For family reading, try the following books, which present nurturing
fathers or families.
* Bear at the Beach, by Clay Carmichael, ages six
to eight, published by North South Books, 1996. "Simple line
drawings and soothing pastel watercolors depict the gentle
seaside setting for this story of a bear who longs for a father."
(Review from The Horn Book )
* Just Me and My Dad, by Mercer Mayer, ages four
to eight, Golden Look-Look Book, 1982. "Father and son go
camping, but who is really taking care of whom? The happy
father and son manage to put up their tent, catch fish for
dinner, and sleep beneath the stars." (Amazon.com editorial
review)
* Laura's Pa, by Laura Ingalls Wilder, ages seven
to ten, HarperCollins Children's Book Group, 1999. "Laura
helps Pa make a door for their cabin and finds that no matter
how hard Pa works, he's never too tired to sing and play the
fiddle for his little girls." (publisher's review)
* Ramona and Her Father, by Beverly Cleary, ages
eight to 12, William Morrow and Company, 1990. A Newberry
Honor Book, "This tale recounts Ramona's efforts to cheer
up her father after he loses his job, including a crusade
to help him stop smoking." (Amazon.com editorial review)
* Our Only May Amelia, by Jennifer L. Holm, ages
nine and up, HarperCollins Publishers, 1999. In this Newberry
Honor Book, readers learn that life 100 years ago wasn't too
different from life in the 21st century. Amelia's father set
rules, her brothers argued with her, and she ran away.
In his article
Homework? Help!, Gowan describes his confusion about homework assignments.
"It's really frustrating to be a college graduate and yet have to tell
your ten-year-old that you don't have a clue how to complete his homework,"
Gowan said.
"Sometimes I think the assignments are designed more to test the basic
intelligence of the parents," Gowan told his readers.
A special reading time with dad. David Shaw's son Ryan was in
trouble almost from the beginning of first grade. According to his teacher,
his social skills were poor and he was in the lowest reading group.
Shaw, a California computer consultant, works a flexible schedule, and
he is able to attend regular conferences with his son's teacher. They
developed a reward system (McDonalds with dad) and Ryan's reading and
behavior improved.
"Now he loves to read, and he can't wait to go to school," Shaw told
Education World. "Every day we have a special time to read together."
Ryan is reading grade level material and his teacher says he will be ready
for second grade.
Doughnut and dads. Last month, Tincher Preparatory School celebrated
its second annual Dad's Doughnut Day. Fathers and significant men in children's
lives attended a coffee and doughnut breakfast in the school cafeteria.
They the "dads" stayed and visited the classrooms of their children. This
is a very popular event that has included 500 or more fathers and significant
others.
"Photographs are taken of each father and his child," Bill Vogel, school
principal, told Education World. "The teaching staff structures activities
that include the fathers. Writing exercises, science experiments, hands-on
math, and technology lessons were among those activities."
This is one of many activities at Tincher that promote a strong community
and school-parent bond. Others events include Mom's Muffin Morning, Grandparents
Day, and a Power Lunch.
FATHERS' PARTICIPATION, A BOOST FOR KIDS
Mike Gowan and David Shaw are dads who seem to be on the right track.
Fathers'
Involvement in Their Children's Schools is an October 1997 report
from the National Center for Education Statistics. According to the report,
children whose fathers participate in classroom activities and school
meetings and events receive higher grades, enjoy school more, and are
more likely to participate in extracurricular activities than children
whose fathers don't participate -- regardless of the level of maternal
participation.
In spite of the benefits of father participation, according to the NCES
report, fathers often are not involved in children's education:
Nearly 70 percent of nonresident fathers and 50 percent of fathers
in two-parent families are not involved in school-related activities.
School climate had a significant impact on the degree of father involvement,
particularly in grades 6 through 12.
The advantages of paternal involvement were most significant in grades
6 through 12.
HOW IMPORTANT ARE DADS?
Research appears to confirm the adverse consequences boys face when
they grow up in homes with absentee dads. A recent study of 6,000 males
ages 14 to 22 found that boys whose fathers were absent from the household
had double the odds of going to prison. That study, produced by Cynthia
Harper of the University of Pennsylvania and Sara S. McLanahan of Princeton
University, found that such factors as race, income, parents' education,
and place of residence had little or no bearing. Other results of this
study, according to a Reuters news report, "Boys With Absentee Dads Twice
as Likely to be Jailed" (August, 21, 1998), included the following:
The risk of incarceration for boys who grow up with a stepfather
in the home is about three times that of children who remain with both
natural parents.
Remarriage of parents doesn't help. A stepparent in the household
doesn't erase the absent father problem.
Young men whose parents separated during adolescence are roughly
one and a half times as likely to end up in jail as are children from
intact families.
Boys whose parents separate fare only slightly better than boys born
to single mothers do.
FATHERS AND TEENAGE SUBSTANCE ABUSE
A national study of father-son relationships found significant ties
between substance abuse and homes where father and son didn't get along.
According to a New York Times article about that study ("Teenage
Substance Abuse and Paternal Ties," August 31, 1999) "teenagers who do
not get along well with their fathers are more likely to smoke, drink,
and use drugs than youngsters in average two-parent families."
Furthermore, the Times reported, "a child living in a two-parent
family, whose relationship with the father is poor, is 68 percent more
likely to smoke, drink, and use drugs than teens living in an average
two-parent household."
The report also found that a child in a two-parent family where the
child has a poor or fair relationship with the father is at more than
60 percent higher risk of substance abuse than a child growing up in a
home headed by a single mother where the child has an excellent relationship
with the mother.
A PARENT-EDUCATION PROGRAM FOR DADS
"Many fathers, though willing, are unprepared for this new and expanded
parenting role. For this reason, involving fathers in parent education
programs should be a program priority," wrote Virginia Commonwealth's
professor Beale in last October's issue of Professional School Counseling.
Beale suggested a series of planned parent-education activities to help
fathers discover more-effective ways of dealing with their children. He
reported that activities directed by school counselors have helped fathers
become actively involved with their elementary age children. He shared
some of those activities in Professional School Counseling. Two
of those activities follow:
Activity 1: Father's night out
Fathers answer the 25 questions on a "How Well Do You Know Your Child"
questionnaire. Then they participate in a group discussion led by a school
counselor. A few of the questions are listed below.
Who is your child's favorite teacher?
What does your child like most about school?
Name your child's favorite friend.
What is your child's proudest accomplishment?
What does your child think you do for a living?
Where would your child most like to go on a vacation this year?"
Activity 2: Father-child interviews
Fathers interview their children to determine the correct answers to the
questions.
"In a number of cases, the interview process led to meaningful
discussions between fathers and children about the ways in which they
are both changing and growing," said Beale.
REPORT SHARES WAYS 'DADS MAKE A DIFFERENCE'
Other ways to involve dads in school are suggested in
Dads Make a Difference on NAESP Principal Online, the Web site for
the National Association of Elementary School Principals. In an effort
to involve fathers, James Lewis, principal of Gene George Elementary School
in Springdale, Arkansas, planned a building project where fathers helped
add improvements to the school gym. According to the story, the informal
setting often contributed to serious discussions about children. "I was
cutting two-by-fours with a dad, and we got to talking about his daughter,"
Lewis said.
Stan Paine, principal of Centennial Elementary in Springfield, Oregon,
instituted a food and games night for dads and their kids. After pizza
and basketball are finished, Paine recommends books that fathers and kids
can read together.
To accommodate parents, Principal Jan Riebhoff, principal of Belgrade
Intermediate School in Belgrade, Montana, schedules parent-teacher conferences
in the evening. To build a list of volunteers, a sign-up sheet for parents
is included in the student handbook. "Parents who do volunteer get the
VIP treatment, complete with the cheers of a student-led thank-you squad
at each visit."
The article concludes with the following advice on principals' helping
fathers: "Simply by recognizing the factors that surround parental involvement
(or the lack thereof) and offering easy ways for parents to become involved,
principals can make a real difference in student success."
ADDITIONAL ONLINE RESOURCES ABOUT FATHERS
Center for Successful
Fathering, Inc.
This site is designed to provide education and support for fathers.
It offers online seminars on parenting issues and links to related sites.
National
Center on Fathers and Families (NCOFF)
The NCOFF, established at the University of Pennsylvania, consists of
seven libraries for different populations of fathers and families.
MORE ABOUT FATHERS IN EDUCATION
Bring
Your Fathers to School!
The article discusses the implications of parental involvement to a child's
success in school. It offers ways to involve fathers at school.