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Dad’s Involvement In The Child’s Routines!

Men initially have to lose, loving relationships with their children in the preschool years. When fathers do this, they're writing a script that says they're involved in their child's life. Their expectation is that they'll go on being involved in that child's life.
If you, as a dad, develop an affectionate way of interacting with your preschooler, later when your child comes home and tells you what he's done in school that day. The warm, close relationship you've built will allow him to approach you with trust. It will allow you to respond to your child's enthusiasm or frustration in a positive way.
There is a difference in mothers' and fathers' involvement in school and the children's student achievement. Although mothers' involvement in school-related activities was positively associated with student achievement, fathers' involvement in such activities had a negative correlation with academic success.
Fathers can do the simple acts like winking at his three-year-old child. If fathers wait to seek a closer relationship with their child until later in the child's life, the moment has passed. Although mothers' involvement in school-related activities was positively associated with student achievement, fathers' involvement in such activities had a negative correlation with academic success.
This occurs because fathers who have established a pattern of being involved early in a child's life are more likely to step in at school (for example, in formal conferences and interaction with teachers) when their child is struggling in the school setting. However, parental roles are not scripted for men as they are for women, and expectations aren't as clear-cut, saying: "As long as a father is providing for his children, he's usually considered a good father."
Brent McBride, a professor of Human Development at University of Illinois conducted this study.



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