Foster care

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    we improve the Foster Care System in the United States? An Annotated Bibliography About two years ago, my aunt adopted a little boy from the United States. It was a joyous occasion and we all adored him and love having him as an addition to our large family. While my younger cousin has a happy life right now in the care of my aunt, there was so much trauma and struggles that this little boy had to face at such a young age that came from the big process of adoption and foster care. It is…

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    The Foster Care System Faces Issues In the United States there are 397,122 children in the foster care system and while most foster “parents” do all they can for these children others do less than what is needed of these children. Statistics show that if nothing changes by the year 2020 more than 22,500 children will have been abused or mistreated in the foster care system. More often than not the foster system does more harm than help. Most foster children are abused, moved around way too much,…

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    Paper Social Problem According to the United States Department of Education, children in foster care represent one of the most vulnerable populations amongst our youth (U.S. Department of Education, 2016). The extenuating circumstances that this group experiences, impacts their physical, emotional, and mental-health development which can influence the overall welfare and resiliency of children in foster care. These implications generate barriers that impede one’s potential to achieve success…

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    The article “Kinship and Nonrelative Foster Care: The Effect of Placement Type on a Child Well-Being” was writing by Sarah Font from the University of Wisconsin. This article can be found in the professional journal, Child Development, September/October 2014, volume 84, number 5, and pages 2074-2090. This article attempts to address differences in children who are removed from their parents and placed in kinship and nonrelative care by measuring achievements, behaviors and health. The article…

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    The concept of foster care and adoption can be traced as far back as the Old Testament. The book of Esther tells the story of a young girl who was taken in, after her parents died, by her cousin and became queen of Persia. Although Esther’s story has a happy ending, many of the children in today’s foster care system do not. The teenagers who are aging out of foster care has the steepest hill to climb. The system is set up to be a temporary solution until they can locate a permanent home for the…

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    Which system provides better care for orphaned children; foster care or orphanages? This paper will examine the differences between foster care and orphanages and their pros and the cons. This paper will examine the foster care and today”s systems. Foster Care is a system in which children are placed because their biological parents cannot take them. An orphanage is a home for children which their parents cannot take of them or they are dead. The first orphanage was established was in the…

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    Children in foster care wait too long in custody before being placed into a home with a family setting. According to Section: D Foster Care Policy, the policy and program goals were a positive outcome for the client (p.18). The adoption act of 2008, states that the increasing opportunities for adoption and relative guardianship are for the wellbeing of the child. The act is thought to increase the adoption that is taken place but instead it could decrease (p.18). Looking at the strength based…

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    Why Siblings Should Not be Separated in Foster Care Foster care is an ever-evolving system. Its brilliant purpose is to care for minors temporarily while their birth parents are unable to do so. Though its outside appearance is amazing, some flaws lie within. The most major flaw being children separated from their siblings. Children are removed from their home and placed with strangers, already stripping them of their familial identity. Separating them from their siblings as well would make them…

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    the 1930s, and this is around the time where the early stages of foster care started developing. Foster care is still around, and the system is as broken as it was when it was first introduced. In Orphan Train, part of the story revolves a young girl, Niamph, who’s parents died, and placed into foster care. She jumped around from house to house. In the first house, she was selected off of the orphan train for labor, and her foster parents didn’t take her to school, —a requirement for child…

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    In the time before the enactment of the Foster Care Independence Act of 1999, which addressed the issue of foster children who were aging out of foster care, there were laws that were passed to confront related problems in childcare. One of these laws was the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA) of 1985. This was an addition of the section 477 of Title IV-E of the Social Security Act (Children’s Bureau, 1987). The act funded $70 million dollars every year to states. The amount…

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