Baby Elmo Leads Dads Back to the Nursery: How a Relationship-Based Intervention for Incarcerated Fathers Enhances Father and Child Outcomes

Although children's contact with involved, committed, nonresidential fathers can improve social, emotional, cognitive, and academic outcomes, fathers have largely been absent from parenting interventions that overlook men's role as a critical parenting partner. This article details researc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Zero to three 2015-05, Vol.35 (5), p.25
Hauptverfasser: Richeda, Benjamin, Smith, Kelly, Perkins, Emily, Simmons, Sydney, Cowan, Philip, Cowan, Carolyn Pape, Rodriguez, Jennifer, Shauffer, Carole
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container_issue 5
container_start_page 25
container_title Zero to three
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creator Richeda, Benjamin
Smith, Kelly
Perkins, Emily
Simmons, Sydney
Cowan, Philip
Cowan, Carolyn Pape
Rodriguez, Jennifer
Shauffer, Carole
description Although children's contact with involved, committed, nonresidential fathers can improve social, emotional, cognitive, and academic outcomes, fathers have largely been absent from parenting interventions that overlook men's role as a critical parenting partner. This article details research showing that young incarcerated fathers' attitudes about--and communication and responsiveness to--their very young children improved following a brief psychoeducational intervention and describes a second pilot project with child-welfare--involved fathers and families. The projects enrolling high-risk, difficult-to-engage parents yielded promising findings, demonstrating how building interventions that are inclusive of fathers stands to benefit child outcomes.
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subjects Attitude Change
Child Development
Child Welfare
Correctional Institutions
Family Programs
Father Attitudes
Fathers
Institutionalized Persons
Intervention
Males
Parent Child Relationship
Parent Participation
Parent Role
Pilot Projects
Program Descriptions
Program Effectiveness
Psychoeducational Methods
Social Services
Statistical Analysis
Young Children
title Baby Elmo Leads Dads Back to the Nursery: How a Relationship-Based Intervention for Incarcerated Fathers Enhances Father and Child Outcomes
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