Narrative Accounts, Generative Fathering, and Family Life Education

This article suggests that theory and story can be effectively linked in interpretive family life education programs and illustrates this potential by discussing how personal narrative accounts of fathers encounters with their children can be used to understand and encourage good fathering (herein r...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inMarriage & family review Vol. 24; no. 3-4; pp. 349 - 368
Main Authors Dollahite, David C., Hawkins, Alan J., Brotherson, Sean E.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York Taylor & Francis Group 01.01.1996
Taylor & Francis Ltd
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Summary:This article suggests that theory and story can be effectively linked in interpretive family life education programs and illustrates this potential by discussing how personal narrative accounts of fathers encounters with their children can be used to understand and encourage good fathering (herein referred to as generative fathering). The article (a) presents a theory of how fathers change and the implications of this theory for the use of fathers narrative accounts in interpretive family life education, (b) briefly discusses the concept of generative fathering and presents a conceptual framework for understanding and encouraging generative fathering, and (c) illustrates the potential utility of narrative accounts in encouraging generative fathering in family life education with accounts collected from fathers. Although the method applied herein is not, in the strictest sense, qualitative research, it illustrates how qualitative methodology can be applied to family life education.
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ISSN:0149-4929
1540-9635
DOI:10.1300/J002v24n03_07