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DADS COUNT

How do fathers parent? Is it different from the way mothers parent? If the child has a strong and secure bond with the mother, does the lack of father involvement really matter?

A great deal of research has been conducted to address these questions. And the findings may surprise you.

Children with fathers involved in their lives tend to make better grades in school. This is not an accident. Fathers more than mothers tend to put a priority on the child’s academic success.

The child whose father is actively involved in his or her life also typically has fewer behavioral problems in school. Fathers are often more authoritative, focusing more on morality and discipline. Hence the child is less likely to reject or defy other authorities.

For the same reasons, when the father is involved, the child is less likely to get in trouble with the law.

When the father is involved, the child tends to have higher self-esteem. The importance of this effect can hardly be overstated. High self-esteem is a "universal resource." There is nothing researchers have been able to measure that people with high self-esteem don’t do better than those with low self-esteem! They do better in school. They do better as athletes. They do better in careers. They have more friends. They do better in dating. They even make better parents!

When the father is involved, the child is less likely to be promiscuous. And, if female, the child is less likely to become pregnant out of wedlock. This is due partly to the father’s greater focus on morality and discipline, and partly to the child having higher self-esteem.

Children who enjoy active involvement with their fathers also report higher career goals. These children actually achieve higher levels of occupational success.

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