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What about Dads

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All families have hopes, dreams and wishes for their children. ... Families should be assisted in ways that help them maintain their dignity and hope. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What about Dads


1
What about Dads?
  • Joseph Anderson
  • John Hoffman

2
What about Dads?
  • Participants will listen to and engage in a
    dialogue with two fathers about strategies to
    support father
  • involvement and their unique perspectives on what
    inclusion has meant for their families--its
    rewards,
  • challenges and hopes within the early
    intervention system, home and community.
  • Plus an opportunity to talk about the cultural
    aspects of recognizing the importance of fathers
    and the roles that they play within the family
    structure

3
Ground Rules
  • Normal is only a cycle on a washing machine

4
The Quotable Dad
  • On Becoming a Father
  • If you ever become a father, I think the
    strangest and strongest sensation of your life
    will be hearing for the first time the thin cry
    of your child. -LAFCADIO HEARN-

5
  • A Hard Profession
  • Like any father, I have moments when I wonder
    whether I belong to the children or they belong
    to me. -Bob Hope
  • Insanity is hereditary you can get it from your
    children. -Sam Levenson-

6
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7
Roles of Fathers
  • Biological Fathers -
  • Traditional Nuclear Family.
  • Custodial Father
  • Non Custodial Father -
  • Divorced. Has visitation rights or joint custody
  • Father Figure -
  • Grandparents, step fathers, extended family
    friends, relatives
  • Primary role model or live in boyfriend
  • Incarcerated Father - Imprisonment
  • ????????

8
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9
Our Stories
  • The beginning
  • Births and Diagnosis
  • Medical response to our families
    (positive/negative)
  • What was helpful or not.
  • Expectations
  • Obstacles

10
This is how Hope started her journey into the
world
11
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12
Love my smile?
13
The Love of a Father and Son..
Partnership
14
Love My Smile?
15
What about Natural Environments
  • Natural Learning Opportunities
  • Participation in families everyday activities,
    places and relationships
  • IFSP as an going FAMILY document
  • Integrated supports and services

16
Location
Activity
Opportunities
Adapted from Carol Trivette 1998
17
Location Activity
Opportunity
What is the Natural Learning Opportunity?
18
Location Activity
Opportunity
19
Family Centered supports and services
  • All people need support and encouragement.
  • All families have hopes, dreams and wishes for
    their children.
  • All people have different but equally important
    skills, abilities and knowledge (strengths).
  • Families are resourceful, but all families do not
    have equal access to resources.
  • Families should be assisted in ways that help
    them maintain their dignity and hope.
  • Families should be equal partners in the
    relationships with service providers.
  • Providers work for families

Lynda Cook Pletcher and Sue McBride 1998
20
Barriers and Stereotypes of Fathers?
21
Barriers/Stereotypes of Fathers
22
Barriers/Stereotypes of Fathers
  • Men are not sensitive to issues of Children.
  • Majority of people working in the Early Childhood
    field are women.
  • Poverty or working class mentality ( Looking at
    what roles the father plays -Nature vs. Nurture)
  • Not believing in the importance of reaching out
    to the opposite sex.
  • Men dont take initiatives in their
    child/children's care.Dads are never available
  • Moms are more accessible.

23
Iceberg Concept
  • Just as nine-tenths of an iceberg is out of
    sight, so is nine-tenths of culture out of
    conscious awareness.
  • The out-of-awareness part of culture has been
    termed deep culture

24
An Iceberg Concept of Culture
dress?age race/ethnicity gender ? language eye
behavior? facial expressions body language ?
sense of self notions of modesty ? concept of
cleanliness emotional response patterns rules
for social interaction ? child rearing practices
decision-making processes ?approaches to problem
solving concept of justice ?value individual vs.
group perceptions of mental health, health,
illness, disability patterns of superior and
subordinate roles ? roles in relation to status
by age, gender class and much more
Developed by National Center for Cultural
Competence, 2002 Adapted by the NCCC
25
Reframing
  • Restating a problem in a more positive way in
    order to make the problem see more manageable.
  • A first step in problem solving

26
Reframing Activity
  • In your small group complete the Cultural
    Reframing Exercise handout.

10 minutes
27
  • Dads today spend 50 percent more time with their
    children -- 2.7 hours a day -- than they did 25
    years ago, but they are working just as much,
    according to a 2004 study by the Families and
    Work Institute.

28
  • When asked the No. 1 element essential to a
    balanced life, 84 percent of men said it is
    spending time with family, according to a Best
    Life magazine poll.

29
  • Dads born after the baby boom are trying to
    achieve a better balance between the demands of
    the workplace and raising a family. It's a
    balance women have been trying to strike for
    decades.

30
  • But even with more families juggling two careers,
    the trend of men taking leave or reducing hours
    has been slow to catch on, experts said, since
    most employers do not offer paid paternity leave.
    And some men still fear compromising their
    careers by taking the time, or simply can't
    afford to.

31
  • Fathers of disabled children are fathers first,
    and fathers of a disabled child second. Many of
    the issues faced by fathers of disabled children
    are the same as fathers of non-disabled children
  • Fathers and mothers of disabled children have
    many of the same needs and concerns, but there
    can also be real differences in how they respond
    to their child's condition, what they do to cope,
    and what they find helpful

32
  • Fathers tend to rely heavily on their partners
    for emotional support
  • Fathers can be greatly affected emotionally by a
    child's disability impairment or illness
  • Fathers want information about their child's
    condition and development, what can be done to
    help, and what services are available to help
    their child and the family as a whole

33
  • Fathers want someone to talk to from outside the
    family about their worries and concerns, but are
    not very good at seeking for this type of help or
    support. They also prefer support groups made-up
    of men only because they feel more able to be
    open in such an environment
  • The needs of fathers can be missed by services,
    which tend to focus on support for the child and
    mother
  • Going to work is a common coping strategy of
    fathers and important for identity and
    self-esteem. Fathers want flexibility from
    employers and services so that they can respond
    to the needs of their children, attend
    appointments and be involved in the decisions and
    care relating to their child

34
  • Fathers' stress may be directly related less to
    their child's behavior than the stress felt by
    mothers
  • Fathers can also experience less stress, anxiety
    and depression than mothers, probably because
    mothers take on the majority of the child care
    and everyday related tasks

35
  • Fathers also tend to be less involved and have
    more limited interaction with their disabled than
    their non-disabled children, partly because they
    tend to be more involved in physical activities
  • Unlike mothers, fathers tend to seek support
    almost entirely from their partner or spouse
    rather than friends or family

36
Fathers themselves are also heterogeneous as a
group
  • they can have very different experiences of
    fatherhood
  • their child's disability
  • their own needs and what they find helpful

37
  • Mothers and fathers therefore have both shared
    and individual needs. These differences need to
    be taken into account when devising or providing
    support for families with disabled or chronically
    ill children.

38
Strategery
  • Increase public awareness about the importance of
    fatherhood through sharing research-based
    information
  • Restructure welfare policies that punish marriage
    and responsible fatherhood
  • Encourage the establishment of legal paternity at
    birth

39
More Strategery
  • Provide job training and economic development
    opportunities to fathers who are motivated but
    not able to pay child support due to employment
    challenges
  • Provide parenting education for dads of all ages,
    and develop creative ways for promoting special
    time for fathers and children to spend together.

40
Strategies
  • Implement and encourage use of father-friendly
    employment practices at work. These include
    childcare facilities where fathers work, parental
    leave for child birth, adoption, time off for
    school functions and child medical care, and use
    of flex-time, job sharing and telecommuting work
    options.

41
Strategies
  • Make sure that school course work and youth
    activities provide boys, as well as girls, with
    opportunities to develop the knowledge, skills
    and motivation to become a good parent.
  • It makes good sense to review all policies from
    the standpoint of how they affect parents'
    relationships with their children -- particularly
    at a time when work demands and time pressure can
    make family connections especially fragile.

42
The Community of Man
All men/women are interdependent. Every
nation is an heir of a vast treasury of ideas and
labor to which both the living and the dead of
all nations have contributed. Whether we realize
it or not, each of us lives eternally in the
red. We are everlasting debtors to known and
unknown men and women. When we arise in the
morning, we go to the bathroom where we reach for
a sponge which is provided for us by a Pacific
islander. We reach for soap that is created for
us by a European. Then at the table we drank
coffee which is provided for us by a South
American, or tea by a Chinese, or cocoa by a West
African. Before we leave for our jobs we are
already beholden to more than half of the
world. Martin Luther King, Jr.
43
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44
Fathers Resources
  • http//www.pacer.org/parent/php/PHP-c74.pdf
  • Fathers are important
  • http//www.pacer.org/mpc/pdf/mpc-15.pdf
  • Parent Involvement is the Key
  • http//www.pacer.org/mpc/pdf/mpc-57.pdf
  • Parent Tips for Reading Readiness
  • http//www.pacer.org/parent/php/PHP-c31.pdf
  • Person first language
  • http//www.pacer.org/parent/php/PHP-c96.pdf
  • Parents Key to success in the parent/school
    partnership
  • http//www.pacer.org/parent/php/PHP-c98.pdf
  • Increasing Parent involvement on Boards
  • http//www.pacer.org/mpc/pdf/mpc-45.pdf
  • Family Teacher Partnerships

45
Fathers Resources
  • http//www.fathersnetwork.org/Our mission is to
    celebrate and support fathers and families
    raising children with special health care needs
    and developmental disabilities.
  • http//fatherhood.hhs.gov/index.shtml
  • The Department of Health and Human Services has
    developed a special initiative to support and
    strengthen the roles of fathers in families. 

46
For further information
  • Joseph Anderson (765) 254-9990
  • anderson2280_at_comcast.net
  • John Hoffman (952) 838-1364Jhoffman_at_pacer.org
  • www.pacer.org
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