Vancouver Sun

Be careful who you call an ‘ involved father’

Canadian dads take exception to the term, study fi nds

- MISTY HARRIS POSTMEDIA NEWS

Canadian dads are spending more time with their children, claiming new territory in domestic life, and taking parental leave at an unpreceden­ted rate. But call them “involved fathers” at your own risk.

Though meant as a compliment — the term has flourished as men make inroads as caregivers — a new study finds many dads see it as backhanded, with the implied default being detachment. Indeed, when was the last time you heard a woman described as an involved mother?

To be published Saturday, the White Ribbon Campaign report focuses on the evolution of fatherhood in Canada. The lead researcher sees it as a kind of ballast, countering lingering misconcept­ions about men playing a limited role in their children’s lives.

“We’re really familiar with the less positive aspects of fathering: the uninvolved father, the abusive father, the disciplina­rian. But we felt that there was a different story to tell,” said project lead Ian DeGeer, a PhD candidate at Wilfrid Laurier University.

The study is based on interviews with 53 fathers of diverse incomes, cultures and family arrangemen­ts, in nine focus groups held across Ontario between May and November 2013. Though not generaliza­ble to the population, the findings provide a rich snapshot of fatherhood at a moment in time.

“Involved,” for instance, was revealed to hold very different meanings for different dads.

For some, it was about contributi­ng equal amounts of time to care- giving. For others, it came down to extracurri­culars: facilitati­ng activities, attending parentteac­her conference­s, chaperonin­g birthdays and so on. And for a third group, the expression didn’t resonate at all.

“Being a father meant being involved,” said DeGeer. “They took exception to the term and instead preferred words like ‘ active.’”

Tim Wilson, a single dad for nearly a decade now, is among those who’d happily nominate the expression for retirement. At the same time, however, being responsibl­e for every facet of his child’s life hasn’t stopped strangers from jumping to outdated conclusion­s.

“The automatic assumption — especially when Alex was little and I was pushing a stroller — was that I was giving Mom a break. What a great dad I was!” said Wilson, a gay man who has raised his 10- year- old son solo from 18 months.

Wilson remarked that even experts who should know better often treat dads as a second thought, pointing to a Canadian parenting magazine he said “should just be called ‘ Mom.’”

The study found societal perception­s of men’s roles also revealed themselves through dads’ decisions to take parental leave — something Windsorbas­ed toolmaker Jason Pillon experience­d firsthand.

“Some of the comments ( from co- workers) were like, ‘ Oh my God, you’re taking time off to change diapers?’” said Pillon, whose sons are nine and six. “Even now, when I tell people I’m a stay- at- home father, their first question is always, ‘ Why?’”

His experience has been so rewarding, Pillon would like to see parental leave for dads made mandatory .

Researcher DeGeer said his study’s conclusion is that “fatherhood as a social construct is changing.” Among the most consistent­ly expressed desires by dads, for example, was to parent their kids differentl­y than their own fathers did them. “They’re no longer prepared to be absent from the lives of their children.”

 ?? JENNIFER ROBERTS/ FOR POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Tim Wilson, a single dad for nearly a decade, has been responsibl­e for every facet of his 10- year- old son Alex’s life. A new study is countering lingering misconcept­ions about men playing a limited role in their children’s lives.
JENNIFER ROBERTS/ FOR POSTMEDIA NEWS Tim Wilson, a single dad for nearly a decade, has been responsibl­e for every facet of his 10- year- old son Alex’s life. A new study is countering lingering misconcept­ions about men playing a limited role in their children’s lives.

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