| Literature DB >> 31708843 |
Luca Rollè1, Giulia Gullotta1, Tommaso Trombetta1, Lorenzo Curti1, Eva Gerino1, Piera Brustia1, Angela M Caldarera1.
Abstract
This systematic review aims to examine the existing literature concerning the association between father involvement and the development children's cognitive skills during early and middle childhood. Specifically, it analyzes: (1) how the number of researches developed across years; (2) which are the main socio-demographic characteristics of the samples; (3) which are the main focuses examined; and (4) which operational definitions were used to assess father involvement and children cognitive skills. Following the guidelines of the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) statement, the articles were searched through PubMed and EBSCO (PsycInfo, PsycArticles, Education Source, Social Sciences Abstract, Family Studies Abstracts, Gender Studies Database and CINAHL complete). The findings suggest that, although each research used a different operational definition of the father involvement construct, in recent years there was a wide and constant interest increase about this issue. Most of the empirical studies utilized quantitative methods, whereas relatively few used qualitative and only one mixed methods. As regards the analysis of socio-demographic characteristics of the samples there is a great evidence that most of them included biological and residential fathers: it may reflect that this type of sample is easier to recruit than non-residential and non-biological fathers. Regarding the socio-economic status and the ethnicity of families, the data highlighted how in recent years the literature on father involvement is starting to look at differences in ethnic and cultural backgrounds, in contrast to past researches. The findings revealed that the main focus is the impact of father involvement on children's cognitive skills and the most of the studies highlighted that it is positive and statistically significant. Regarding to the assessment of father involvement and children's cognitive skills, the literature is quite heterogeneous.Entities:
Keywords: cognitive skills; fathers; fathers involvement; learning; parenting
Year: 2019 PMID: 31708843 PMCID: PMC6823210 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.02405
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram of study selction.
Type of document.
| Quantitative | 16 | 40 |
| Qualitative | 9 | 22.5 |
| Meta-analysis | 3 | 7.5 |
| Review | 4 | 10 |
| Case report | 5 | 12.5 |
| Theoretical article | 1 | 2.5 |
| Mixed methods | 2 | 5 |
| 40 | 100 |
Reviewes and meta-analysies included in the study.
| Saracho ( | Review | Hispanic father involvement in children's literacy | Ethnicity minority | Literacy skills | FI and children's outcomes | Hispanic father support their children's literacy skills by (a) reading books (b) books discussion (c) recording book already read and (d) stimulating children to enhance their reading |
| Jeynes ( | Meta-anlysis | Relationship between father involvement | Mix ethnicity | Academic skills | FI and children's outcomes | Relationship between |
| Downer et al. ( | Meta-analysis | Father involvement | Mixed Ethnicity | Academic | FI and children's outcomes | The consistent of the association between father involvement and children's academic achievement is manteined across etnicity and SES |
| McWayne et al. ( | Meta-analysis | Father involvement | Mixed ethnicity | Social and cognitive | FI and children's outcomes | Father involvement showed a consistent association with early childhood competencies, differing based on father's characteristic |
| Saracho ( | Review | The role of father in supporting their children's literacy learning | Literacy skills | FI and children's outcomes | Fathers' contribution improve their children's literacy and academic skills | |
| Kim and Hill ( | Meta-anlysis | The association between parental involvement and children's acedemic achievement | Mixed Ethnicity | FI and children's outcomes | Parental involvement and student achievemente are positively, althought mothers' involvement is higher than fathers' | |
| Lipscomb ( | Review | The effects of FI on their children's educational achievement and programs to increase it | FI and children's outcomes | There are several programs, particularly aimed to specific population or more general, that can increase father involvement in children education | ||
Studies included in the meta-analysis listed by author, year of study, type of document, objects, and other.
| Potter et al. ( | Case report | Evaluete the benefits of Father Transition Project (FTP) | 5 fathers and 2 grandfathers | Interview | Low SES | Enjoyment | Intervention | Key benefits: a closer relationships with children and an improved involvement both in educational activities |
| Potter et al. ( | Case report | Assess thestrategies most successful in engaging fathers of FTP | 5 fathers and 2 grandfathers | Interview | Low SES | Enjoyment | Intervention | The most effective strategies were a personalized, strengths-based within a cooperation context and utilizing an empowerment approach. |
| Eng et al. ( | Quantitative | The role of social capital as a predictor of parental involvement in children's education | 273 parents | FI at school: P-TIQ (Parent Version) | Minoriy | Determinant | Parents' social networks, academic ambition, trust, gender attitudes and fatalistic convinction can be considered as a predictor of parental involvement | |
| Keown and Palmer ( | Qualitative | Compare father-son and mother-son involvement | 94 families | Interview | Resident | Comparison | Mothers are more accessible to their son on the working days than fathers, while fathers spend more time with their children on weekend days | |
| Flouri and Buchanan ( | Quantitative | Early father and mother involvement and child's later educational outcomes | Self-report | Accademic | FI and children's outcomes | Father involvement indipendently and significantly predicted educational attainment by 20 years | ||
| Fagan and Lee ( | Quantitative | Effects of fathers and mothers cognitive stimulation and household income on single mother e two parents household on young childrend | 8,400 children and parents | Mother | Mixed | Cognitive skills (BSF) | FI and children's outcomes | Positive association between fathers' cognitive stimulation and children cognitive skills is stronger for children living in single mother household than for children living in 2 parents families |
| Coley et al. ( | Quantitative | Relationship between fathers early parenting and | 261 biological | Self-report | Mixed | Math reading (WJ-R) | FI and children's outcomes | Fathers' support and warm predicted higher accademic skills, over and beyond the chareteristics of the family |
| Baker ( | Quantitative | Father–school involvement and children's academic and social-emotional skills | 3,570 children in kindergarten | Self-report | Mixed | Reading math and approch to leaning | FI and children's outcomes | Although mothers are more engaged in school involvement, father-school involvement is positively associated with children's academic skills |
| Chawla-Duggan ( | Qualitative | How father development workers supported fathers to increase paternal involvement in children's learning | 4 fathers and their early years sons | InterviewFocus Group | Children's learning | Intervention | Father development workers support fathers within the group, raising confidence and responsibility, and with the child, improving children's learning | |
| Black et al. ( | Mix methods | Low income fathers and competences, behaviors and home environment (HE) of preschool children | 175 3-years | Self report | Low-income | Children's well-being: cognition, receptive language, behavior | FI & children's outcomes | There is a significant relationships between paternal role and each index of children's well-being. |
| McBride et al. ( | Quantitative | Examine the relationship between father involvement in school and children's achievement | 596 children | Self-report | Reading | FI and children's outcomes | It can be see a variation based on children gender, ethnicty and SES in the relationship between father involvement and children's achievement | |
| Ball ( | Qualitative | To develop a theoretical framework about the experiences of Indigenous fathers in various needs and goals. | 80 fathers | Self-report | Biological fathers (84%) | Determinant | Six ecological and psychological factors: personal well-being, learning, socio-economic inclusion, social, legislative and policy support and cultural continuity | |
| Baker ( | Quantitative | The role of ethnicity and | 4,240 young boys | Self-report | Mixed Ethnicity | Math and reading | FI and children's outcomes | Paternal warmth and home learning stimulation (HLS) at T1 positively predicted cognitive and social emotional skills at T2, across raical groups. |
| Baker et al. ( | Quantitative | Relationship between family poverty, warmth and home learning stimulation (HLS) and children's preschool achivement | 7,700 children | Self-report | Mixed SES | Reading | FI and children's outcomes | Although poverty negatively influences more fathers' parenting than mothers', fathers involvement turned out as stronger moderator between poverty and children's cognitive skills than mothers' |
| Tan and Goldberg ( | Qualitative | Parents involvement in children's education at school and at home | 91 families and children | Self-report (API) | Biological (87%) | School | Comparion | Mothers' and fathers' school involvement show a different association with their sons' and daughters' sacademic achievement. |
| Giallo et al. ( | Quantitative | Fathers vs. mothers in the relationship between child, parents, family factors, | 851 mothers | Self-report (PIS) | Non minority | Comparison | There are few differences between mothers 'and fathers' involvement. Parenal self efficacy plays a mediating role both for mothers and fathers | |
| Bradley and Corwyn ( | Qualitative | Personal and contextual | 65 fathers children | PIC | Non minority | Cognitive skills (MDI) | Determinant | Paternal involvement is multi-determined. There is no single factor that has a mastery role. |
| Foster et al. ( | Quantitative | Relationship between home learning environment (HLE) and children's academic skills | 767 parents and children | PQ | Mid to high SES | Decoding non-minority (WJ-III) | FI and children's outcomes | Fathers involvement increase children's academic achievement only whether mothers have at most a high school diploma |
| Saracho ( | Case Report | Effects of Literacy Program, assisting fathers to support children's literacy skills | 25 fathers and children | Interview | Literacy skills | Intervention | In the program fathers learn literacy strategies to support and increase their children's literacy development | |
| Kelly ( | Theoretical | Conceptual model on the relationship between fathers engagement and children's prosocial skills | Cognition | FI and children's outcomes | Fathers engagement with their children is directly related to the childrend's cognitive skills, self-regulation and social behaviors, influencing civic readiness development | |||
| Anderson et al. ( | Qualitative | How the experience on Early Childhood Program (ECP) impact the father-role construction and support the engagement | 7 fathers | Focus Group | Low-income | Learning | Intervention | ECP supports fathers to develop parenting skills. These competences can improve father engagement and create a positive father–child relationships, changing the father-role construction. |
| Roopnarine et al. ( | Quantitative | The association between parenting styles and parent involvement and children's academic achievement and social behaviors | 70 parents and children | Interview | Minority ethnicity | Academic skills | FI and children's outcomes | Father-school involvement is positively associated with children's academic competences but it is negatively associated with authoritarian parenting style |
| Hernandez and Coley ( | Quantitative | Psychometric properties of father and mother reports of father involvement | Self-report | Low-income | Cognitive skills (WJ-R) | Assessment | The reliability is similar between father and mother reports and among residential status and race. | |
| Jeong et al. ( | Quantitative | Paternal stimulation and Early Child Development (ECD)in low- and midlle-income countries (LMICs) | 87,286 children | Mother-report | Physical growth child development (ECDI) | FI & children's outcomes | When fathers are unengaged children have a lower ECD scores than children whose fathers highly engaged | |
| Nordhal et al. ( | Qualitative | Predictors of fathers positive involvement and negative reinforcement | 726 fathers | Interview | Mixed SES | Determinant | Positive involvement and negative reinforcement can be considered two different parenting dimensions | |
| Sun et al. ( | Quantitative | Fathers engagement in early learning activities ss a | Mother-report | Ethnic majority | Early child development (EAP-ECDS) | FI and children's outcomes | Parenatal engagement moderates the relationship between SES and early learning | |
| McBride et al. ( | Quantitative | Direct and indirect effects of early parenting on later | 390 children | Self-report | Resident | Academic achievement (WJ) | FI and children's outcomes | Early parenting is significantly linked to later parental school involvement for both parents but it is not directly associated to academic achievement for both of them. |
| McBride et al. ( | Quantitative | Fathers school involvement | 1,334 families | Self-report | Resident | FI and children's outcoms | Father involvement result a mediator of the relationship between contextual factors and children's academic achievement. | |
| Duursma ( | Qualitative | Paternal and maternal bookreading frequency and young children's language and cognitive development | 430 families | Interview | Low-income | Cognitive skills (MDI) | FI and children's outcomes | Paternal bookreading significantly related to children's language and cognitive skills, although mothers read more than fathers. |
| Ortiz ( | Qualitative | Mexican American fathers bookreading frequency | 25 father | Questionnaire interviews | Minority ethnicity | Literacy skills | FI and children's outcomes | Fathers involvement in early reading activities with their children, although the time varied by different area. |
| Cabrera et al. ( | Mix methods | Father engagement across race, monitoring the following variables: fathers' education, personal wellness, marital status and couple conflict | 5,089 families | Mothers | Biological and resident fathers | Determinant | Fathers' education, marital status, couple conflict, depressive symptoms and type of involvemen do not differ by race, while physical pla and the levels of engagement change. | |
| Baskwill ( | Case study | Program for increase | 15 fathers | Mixed biological status | Litaracy skills | Intervention | During the program fathers can learn the importance of FI, devolop a repertoire of strategies as well as raise a confidence in their ability to engage in children education. | |
Figure 2Published articles (included in this review) across years.
Figure 3Main researches focuses.
Type of construct.
| Father involvement | 15 | 47.5 |
| Father involvement at school | 4 | 10 |
| Father involvement at home | 1 | 2.5 |
| Father involvement in education | 4 | 10 |
| Early father involvement | 5 | 12.5 |
| Engagement | 11 | 27.5 |
| 40 | 100 |