A Family for Every Child is dedicated to finding loving, permanent families for every waiting foster child. Our blog is focused on providing support to families who are thinking about or are a part of the foster care or adoption process.

Wednesday, June 20, 2012


“Helping Foster Kids Transition to Adulthood”                                                    

     Finally a long-term study is being done on “aging-out” and the effects or abilities of transitional programs to ease the dangers and problems associated with aging-out or being left on one’s own.

     The study is being performed by the Manpower Demonstration Research Corporation and the University of Chicago with the help of Edna McConnell Clark Foundation and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.  The study will follow “1,300 Tennessee kids and young adults who are either aging out of foster care or leaving juvenile justice facilities” (Walters). 

     The goal is to determine just how effective intensive transitional living programs are.  The goal is of these programs is to reduce the likelihood of youth experiencing “mental health problems, substance abuse, criminal justice involvement, unemployment, poverty, housing instability, and homelessness” (Walters).  The control group will be naturally occurring as youth are left to find their own social services throughout the rest of the country already.  The study also apparently has a very diverse group of participants (males, females, many cultures/races, and many different educational backgrounds). 

     This study should produce a great deal of much needed data for all states and local programs.  However, an interim study will not be available until 2013, with a final report coming in 2015.  This data will help organizations like ours better understand the aging-out process and learn what transitional programs work.  This will then allow us to adjust our own programs or create new ones to better serve the youth and the community.  Hopefully this study will also prompt larger, more involved studies from the federal government and/or the Department of Human Services.      

Read the entire article by Jonathan Walters

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