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Fathers’ consistent parenting nurtures bonds through teen years

Concept illustration featuring a father and teen icons. Image credit: Nicole Smith, made in part with ChatGPT

Study: Exploring father–adolescent closeness: A random forest approach (DOI: 10.1111/fare.13168)

Children who grow up with their fathers under the same roof tend to feel close to them, forming strong relationships that last through challenging teenage years, according to a new study.

Living in the same home, especially in recent years, was the strongest predictor of a close father-child bond during adolescence, regardless of whether the parents were married.

Researchers from the University of Michigan, University of Nevada-Las Vegas, and The Ohio State University focused on father-child relationships, which are studied less frequently than mother-child relationships, to better understand adolescent development.

The study, which appears in a special issue of the journal Family Relations, showcases how social scientists are using advanced machine learning to break new ground in the study of families.

Infographic with icons and text: Living in the Same Home; Regularly talking; Helping with Homework. Image credit: Nicole Smith, made in part with ChatGPT

Kaitlin Ward

Kaitlin Ward

“Fathers are often left out of research, but their perspectives matter,” said Kaitlin Ward, U-M researcher in the School of Social Work and study co-author. “It can be challenging to study fathers because there’s often less data available about them.”

For example, in long-term studies, mothers are more likely to respond to surveys than fathers, so researchers often rely on mothers’ reports. The study was unique, as it included responses from thousands of racially and economically diverse fathers across the U.S. This paves the way for more inclusive and nuanced investigations into fatherhood.

This study shows how researchers can use available data from fathers themselves (nearly 3,000 participants in the Future of Families and Child Wellbeing Study), highlighting how their perspectives and experiences across childhood shape the quality of their relationships with their children.

The study’s results are straightforward: simple, consistent involvement from fathers builds closeness during adolescence.

“When fathers regularly talk to their kids, help with homework, and show interest in their lives, it strengthens their relationships over time,” said Garrett Pace, the study’s lead author and assistant professor at UNLV. “These everyday interactions, especially in later childhood, are key to developing lasting closeness.”

The study’s authors are OSU assistant professor Joyce Lee and U-M researcher Olivia Chang.

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