Pros And Cons Of The Foster Care System

1346 Words6 Pages

While the act of giving birth biologically makes you a mother, it does not automatically make you a parent. Often, women who become pregnant are not ready to be a parent or to give up an unsafe lifestyle they are in. Additionally, some of these women find themselves in relationships with men who are abusive to their children; physically, mentally, or sexually. With any luck, these children will find their way out of these homes through other family members or through the foster care system. Unfortunately, it seems that the number of children in the foster care system is continually increasing, with numbers growing from 427,400 in 2015 to 437,500 in 2016. Thankfully, with this increase in children in the foster care system, there has also been an increase in …show more content…

It Is clear that although they may face increased risk for numerous negative outcomes, many foster and adopted children also display very high rates of resilience, especially when removed from circumstances of ongoing adversity and placed in stable, supportive, family-based care. (Fisher, 2015, p. 8). Fisher( 2015) states that there are many interventions that are being tried across the United States and the United Kingdom, however the ones that are proving to be most successful seem to have one common trait. “The interventions with the most promising results span the theoretical spectrum from attachment theory to social learning theory but are unified in their joint emphasis on child vulnerabilities and positive caregiving practices” (Fisher, 2015, p.10). These interventions are proving to be effective in diminishing the effects of early developmental issues, however these programs need to be made more accessible to all children in foster or adoptive homes (Fisher,

More about Pros And Cons Of The Foster Care System