Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Week 5 Blog

Adopted Children and Foster Homes


Our text describes “adopted child’s syndrome” as a theory that adopted children are more prone to behavioral issues, substance abuse and criminal history. In my experience this has been true. The text also states that pre-adoption experiences is what really can cause these behavioral experiences. If we know this to be true than why doesn’t it take more effort to become a foster parent? After doing some research I found that it can take 1-3 months of training or 25 to 35 hours, there is no income requirement, You can be single and unmarried, and some agencies even let you foster at only 21 years of age. Maybe these foster parents are not financially and emotionally for this responsibility. My sister was put into foster care and was shuffled from house to house because of very severe ADHD. She was a challenging child to deal with. During that time she was a victim of sexual and physical abuse by other children and adults at the various homes. Finally she was adopted at 5 years old by a family member. However, the damage had been done and she is not doing well in her life. As described in the “effects of abuse on children” section, her social and emotional development was majorly damaged which contributed to, failure to bond, poor relationships, poor academics, and eventually drug use and criminal activity.

My biggest question that I would like to investigate is, how can we make foster homes a safer environment for children? There is obviously something wrong with this system, how come nobody is fixing it?

1 comment:

  1. I agree with you that there should be more guidelines to becoming a foster parent, but I am also confused about how they would go about enforcing them. For instance, 21 does seem young to be a foster parent, but at 21 you are a legal adult who can vote, drink alcohol, fight for our country, and have a baby of your own. There could be a few 21 year olds out there who are extremely mature for their age. There would have to be a case-by-case consideration. Also, I haven't done the research so I'm not sure what goes into the screening process, but is there any mental health evaluation? That would surely weed out some of the bad candidates.

    ReplyDelete