3 minute read

Fall 2022 InDepth

Working to Support Families

By Kira Goldenberg

Professor Marsha Kline Pruett, M.S., M.S.L., Ph.D., ABPP, a specialist in co-parenting and family development who describes her focus as “a broader, more inclusive view of family structures,” has been busily working on building and growing tools and interventions focused on family systems dynamics.

One project is Co-Parenting Across Family Structures (CoPAFS), a 27item survey tool to measure the level of co-parenting within a family, usable both by agencies to track pro gram effectiveness and as a clinical assessment instrument. The survey, currently translated into seven languages, looks at five factors: trust, respect, acrimony, communication and valuing the other parent.

So far, Kline Pruett and her colleagues’ research shows that CoPAFS retains validity across languages and cultures. It also distinguishes how the five factors vary across family structures (such as married, divorced, never married, etc.).

My work has focused on bringing fathers who were formerly viewed predominantly as the ‘problem makers’—the men who were absent, abusive, or inconsistent—and create a positive role for them in the family.

Marsha Kline Pruett, M.S., M.S.L., Ph.D., ABPP.

Marsha Kline Pruett, M.S., M.S.L., Ph.D., ABPP.

Shana Sureck Photography

A series of studies have demonstrated that Supporting Father Involvement (SFI) reduces child abuse risk factors, while increasing paternal involvement, co-parenting communication, the quality of parenting and family income.

“We’ve published several papers illustrating how the data we’ve collected can be useful clinically and valid statistically, while being short and easy to administer. There’s nothing like it in the field,” Kline Pruett said. “We’re showing what I would call the fundamental corner stone of parenting relationships: If there’s no trust and respect, you’re not going to get very far working on communication and anger.”

“It takes a village,” Kline Pruett said. “We know that it’s best for children to have as much family that can work together on their behalf as possible. My work has focused on bringing fathers who were formerly viewed pre dominantly as the ‘problem makers’— the men who were absent, abusive, or inconsistent—and create a positive role for them in the family. Their ‘stepping up’ continues to support the incredibly salient role that mothers play, but we also recognize that fathers and grandparents also do a lot of parenting and contribute importantly to children’s well-being in families. We need to widen our focus about who raises children and how they can better work together on behalf of the children they all love.”