Reclaiming Fatherhood: Why Supporting Dads Is the Key to Stronger Families and Better Outcomes for Kids

August 1, 2025

August 1, 2025

by Dr. Alan-Michael Graves

Fatherhood isn’t just about presence: it’s about power, purpose, and connection. In many communities, especially among Black families, fathers are stepping up in ways that defy outdated stereotypes. But while the cards and cookouts roll out every Father’s Day, a deeper truth remains: society often treats dads, particularly dads of color, as optional. To build healthier families and stronger communities, we must shift our perspective on and support for fatherhood, not just culturally but also structurally.

Father and daughter together. Black african american daughter hugs dad and smiling for an article titled, "reclaiming fatherhood: why supporting dads is the key to stronger families and better outcomes for kids"

The Impact of Engaged Fathers on Child Development

Study after study confirms the vital role engaged fathers play in a child’s well-being: children with involved fathers perform better academically, build stronger relationships, and are twice as likely to attend college or secure stable employment after high school.

But more than 17 million children in the U.S. are growing up without their fathers. A father’s absence isn’t just emotional, it’s structural. Children without a present father are four times more likely to experience poverty, three times more likely to struggle in school, and twice as likely to engage in criminal activity. These numbers highlight families under strain financially, emotionally, and socially.

Systems Often Marginalize Fathers and Father Figures

When it is safe and appropriate, fathers should be active participants in their children’s lives. Yet our systems, from schools and courts to social services, often treat them as invisible or irrelevant. After decades of working in fatherhood engagement, I’ve seen this firsthand. Forms only mention mothers. Custody defaults to moms. Programs are scheduled at times that ignore a father’s work schedule.

Personal Reflections: What It Means to Grow Up Without a Father

I know what it’s like to grow up fatherless. My dad’s absence didn’t define me, but it shaped me quietly and profoundly. From learning how to shave to understanding how to show up in the world as a man of color, the gap was always there. Even now, as a father of four in my fifties, I still feel that absence, not as a wound, but as a space that shaped who I became.

“To build healthier families and stronger communities, we must shift our perspective on and support for fatherhood, not just culturally but also structurally.”

Fathers Want to Be Seen, Heard, and Supported

Fathers want to be acknowledged. They want their experiences, their struggles, joys, and truths to be valued. Over the past two decades, I’ve worked with thousands of dads across the country. I’ve seen single fathers cry when someone finally asked how they were doing. I’ve trained social workers who confessed they’d never been taught how to engage dads. Including fathers has a ripple effect—it strengthens families from the inside out.

Designing Family Services That Include Fathers

At Good+Foundation, our training efforts helped increase father participation in family programs from 36% to 48% over four years. But progress is slow. Most systems still aren’t built with dads in mind. Parenting classes don’t consider fathers’ schedules. Court systems rarely support co-parenting. And intake forms still assume “mom” is the default caregiver. For single fathers and fathers of color, these systemic blind spots are even more harmful.

Why Investing in Fathers Is Investing in Children

When fathers are excluded from support systems, children lose more than just a parent. They lose stability, economic security, and emotional grounding. Supporting fathers benefits the entire family. But this isn’t just a nonprofit issue. It’s a national one. Policymakers, schools, healthcare workers, and communities must come together to recognize and invest in fathers as essential caregivers.

Four Ways to Support and Empower Fathers

  • Shift the Narrative: Many fathers aren’t absent by choice. Let’s stop judging and start amplifying the stories of dads who show up in schools, at games, in places of worship, and online.
  • Train the Frontline: Social workers, teachers, and healthcare providers need tools to connect with dads. Programs like Good+Foundation’s partnership with LA County’s Department of Children and Family Services show how change happens when staff are trained to see and support fathers.
  • Design Services With Fathers in Mind: Change forms to include dads. Offer parenting programs that work with their schedules. Ask local schools and clinics how they include fathers, and help them do better.
  • Push for Policy That Reflects Modern Families: Advocate for paid paternity leave, father-inclusive childcare subsidies, and laws that support co-parenting. Strong families need policies that reflect reality, not stereotypes.

Conclusion

Reclaiming fatherhood is not about diminishing mothers. It’s about completing the picture. True equity in parenting starts when we stop treating fathers as an afterthought. It means intentionally creating space for them in schools, healthcare, social services, and legislation. When we support fathers, we’re not just uplifting men; we’re building a stronger, safer, more connected future for every child in every community.

Dr. Alan-Michael Graves is the Senior Director of Learning & Capacity Building at Good+Foundation, a nonprofit organization that provides training, technical assistance, and capacity-building to transform social service systems.


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