Internal school certificates, thank-you letters, and diplomas, as formal acts of recognition, are a powerful tool of symbolic policy (Pierre Bourdieu). They do not just record achievements but also construct a public image of the "ideal participant" in the educational process, setting norms and expectations. When these awards are systematically granted to mothers or formulated in a gendered manner, they cease to be neutral artifacts and become a mechanism for reproducing and legitimizing institutional "childlessness," gently but persistently excluding fathers from the school life sphere.
Constructing the "correct" gender image of achievement:
Nominations and formulations: Most nominations ("For active participation in class life," "For a significant contribution to upbringing," "The kindest and most helpful") implicitly refer to stereotypically "female" virtues: emotional labor, care, and organization of daily school life aspects. There are a lack or rarity of nominations related to expert, project, technological, or organizational-strategic assistance, where men are more strongly represented in public consciousness ("For developing the material and technical base," "For expert contribution to project activities," "For developing the IT infrastructure of the class").
Indirect message: The child and the collective of teachers see that only certain, gender-specific types of participation are publicly valued and made visible.
Cyclical and public nature of the awards:
Linkage to "female" holidays: The formal presentation of certificates is often timed to March 8 or the end of the school year, which further marks the sphere of school participation as "female." Father's Day (which could have been a symmetrical occasion) is either absent from the school calendar or celebrated formally, without a similar award ceremony.
Public demonstration: Certificates are awarded at parades, concerts, where all children are present. A child whose father is active but whose achievements remain "invisible" to the award system may experience cognitive dissonance: the father helps, but the school thanks only the mother. This undermines the value of the father's contribution in the eyes of the child and society.
Procedural bias:
Nomination mechanism: Candidates for gratitude are often proposed by the parent committee, which in 90% of cases consists of mothers. They naturally nominate those with whom they constantly interact — other mothers. Active fathers remain outside this informational field.
"Data" for awards: The basis for a certificate is often visible, measurable, regular actions: organizing a party, making costumes, daily control of the chat and collections. The contribution of fathers may be different: one-time, but complex technical assistance (equipment setup), strategic planning of a trip, consultation on a project. Such contribution is more difficult to "package" in a standard formulation and falls outside the field of vision of the administration.
Specific example: At a school graduation parade, 15 thank-you letters "for helping to organize the New Year's party" are awarded. All 15 were received by mothers who made costumes and bought gifts. The father, who professionally and free of charge mounted and recorded a festive video clip for the entire school, was not mentioned because his contribution did not fit into the standard template of "organizing the party."
For fathers: the formation of "learned helplessness" and alienation. If the system does not see and value your contribution, motivation for further participation disappears. Why try if "this is not your territory" and recognition will not come anyway? This is a self-reinforcing cycle: fathers are seen less → thanked less → fathers participate less.
For mothers: increased role overload. Public recognition of only their labor implicitly cements their exclusive responsibility for school matters. This may cause a sense of guilt if they do not cope, and resistance if they would like to share the burden but the system does not encourage transferring powers to the father.
For children: the reinforcement of gender stereotypes. The child absorbs that school is "mom's responsibility zone," and the father's role in his education is peripheral. This is particularly harmful for children from incomplete fatherless families, whose parental labor is completely socially invisible.
For the school: the loss of a resource and the growth of a gender gap. The school loses the opportunity to use the diverse competencies of fathers (technical, logistical, scientific, entrepreneurial), which could significantly enrich the educational environment.
Data collection: Initiate an informal audit. Collect and analyze all certificates and thank-you letters awarded in the past year. Identify the gender ratio, analyze the formulations, nominations, and reasons for awards.
Preparation of evidence base: Support your observations with references to research on the importance of father involvement (you can use the works of M. Lamb, R. Plicka, data from UNICEF). Prepare an argument: a gender-balanced recognition system increases the overall level of parental involvement and the quality of the educational environment.
Meeting with the director/vice principal for educational work: Do not accuse, but offer cooperation on the modernization of the reward system. Focus on the benefits for the school:
"We have noticed that the potential of many active fathers remains untapped. We propose to expand the range of nominations to recognize different types of contributions."
"This will increase parental loyalty and attract new resources to the school."
Propose specific solutions:
Introduction of new, gender-neutral, and competency-based nominations: "For developing the digital environment of the class," "For expert contribution to project activities," "For developing infrastructure and safety," "For contribution to career guidance."
Change of formulations: Transition from "Thank-you letter to the mother..." to "Thank-you letter to the parents..." or "legal representatives," indicating the name and surname of the father.
Reform of the nomination procedure: Propose a mechanism where candidates can be nominated not only by members of the parent committee but also by teachers and parents themselves (through an anonymous Google form).
If the administration is inert, action can be taken by the parent community.
Create a "Father's Honor Board" on an unofficial class resource (website, closed social media group), where specific deeds of fathers are publicly thanked with photos and descriptions of their contribution.
Establish an internal, informal "Expert Certificate" in the name of the parent group, which is awarded to fathers for professional assistance. This will create a parallel recognition system that can exert pressure on the official one.
Introduce the issue of gender balance in the reward system to the agenda of the school management council meeting. At this level, a recommended decision on changing the policy can be adopted, which will have weight for the administration.
Case study: In one of the Moscow schools, active fathers conducted an analysis and found that over 5 years, fathers received less than 5% of thank-you letters. They prepared a presentation with a proposal for new nominations ("Class IT Hero," "Idea Generator for Trips") and achieved their inclusion in the official registry of awards. Within a year, the percentage of fathers awarded increased to 25%, and their visible activity increased by 40%.
School certificates are not just pieces of paper. They are signals shaping reality. The "childlessness" policy conducted through them is effective precisely because it acts gently and unconsciously for most participants.
The fight against it is a fight for symbolic inclusion, for the public space of the school to reflect the real diversity of parental roles and contributions. Changing the award system is a tactical move that can become a catalyst for deeper changes: a review of gender roles, the expansion of the concept of "parental involvement," and ultimately, the construction of a more just and effective educational alliance where the value of a parent is determined by their actions, not by gender stereotypes. Only when a grateful father stands as often as a grateful mother on the school stage, children will form a comprehensive picture of family participation in their fate.
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