ensuring educational stability, continuity, & success of children in foster care

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Promoting school connections for youth in child welfare Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care A COLLABORATIVE APPROACH

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Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care. A COLLABORATIVE APPROACH. Why DCF is here today. Trauma impacts the lives of many children…whether they are in state custody or not . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

Promoting school connections for youth in child welfare

Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

A COLLABORATIVE APPROACH

Page 2: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

Why DCF is here today.

•Trauma impacts the lives of many children…whether they are in state custody or not.

•How can our two systems collaborate to support traumatized youth in school and in our local communities?

Page 3: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

Today’s Presentation

1. Intro Activity2. School Challenges for youth in DCF

care3. Grief and Loss4. Attachment and Trauma5. Behaviors and Diagnoses6. What To Do7. Keeping local kids local

Page 4: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

ACTIVITY

• What is your favorite food?• What is your favorite room in your house?• Who is your favorite person?• What is your favorite article of clothing?• What is your favorite object or material possession?

Page 5: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

VERMONT’S GOAL:

• To improve educational stability and academic outcomes for youth in foster care.

• Reduce student trauma through stability.

Page 6: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

School Challenges for Youth in Foster Care

Frequent changes in home and school placements.

Lack of collaboration and coordination among

partners.

Trauma – its impact on relationship skills and

learning.

Page 7: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

The importance of Educational Stability

Vermont youth in foster care are likely to experience 3-7 school

placement changes. Higher #’s for older youth.

(Data collection incomplete.)

Every time a student changes schools they lose approximately 4-6 months of educational

progress.

High school students who changed schools even once were less than half as likely to

graduate.

3-7

4-6

-1/2

Page 8: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

Foster Care Alumni Studies: Education Outcomes

70% of former foster youth

express a desire to attend college

Students in foster care

General student

population

• www.cwla.org^ Casey Northwest Alumni

Study Workshop P_Education Advocacy.ppt

Page 9: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

GRIEF AND LOSS

Page 10: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

GRIEVING PATHWAYLOSS

Physical Health Significant others Self esteem

Shock/Denial

Bargaining

Page 11: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

GRIEVING PATHWAYS con’tActing out Behaviors

Withdrawn behaviors Acting out behaviors

Understanding the Loss

Developing Coping Skills

Managing the Loss

Page 12: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

ATTACHMENT CYCLEChild has need

Signals discomfort

Caregiver meets need

Child signals comfort

Attachment is strengthened

Page 13: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

ATTACHMENT ACTIVITY

• Need 2 volunteers to read Baby Matt and Baby Susan

• Left side of audience is Baby Matt

• Right side of audience is Baby Susan

Page 14: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

TRAUMA – EPISODIC AND CHRONIC

• Overwhelming experience(s)

• Results in vulnerability and loss of control

• Interferes with relationships

• Trauma impacts ability to regulate their emotions.

• Children exposed to trauma spend energy on survival instead of developmental mastery.

Herman, J. (1992). Trauma and Recovery. New York: Basic Books.

Page 15: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

Trauma impacts the lives of many children…whether they are in state custody or not.

Page 16: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

Consistency, structure, routine and nurturing promotes healthy brain development.

Trauma impacts brain development

Page 17: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

Behaviors We See

• Impulsive behaviors• Cutting in line• Pushing, shoving peers• Inappropriate Language • Property destruction• Disturbing/disrupting the classroom• Not making academic progress due to behaviors• Difficulty with transitions• Eat and sleep issues• Difficult peer relationships • Class clown at times• Totally withdrawn at times

Page 18: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

Diagnoses Kids Receive• Learning disabilities• Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder• Oppositional Defiant Disorder• Obsessive Compulsive Disorder• Autism spectrum (high functioning)• Post Traumatic Stress Disorder• Reactive Attachment Disorder• Grieving

Page 19: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

Foster Youth and Special Education

• 50-85% of Vermont youth in foster care are in some form of special education. (anecdotal, data not in)

• Many VT DCF youth are being educated in alternative settings.

• Both CA and MN stats show that youth in care are most likely on an IEPs with an Emotional Disturbance diagnosis.

Page 20: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

Strategies to Help Youth Succeed in School

• Develop an understanding of trauma

• Help youth recognize their strengths

• Provide student with an educational advocate.

• Caregivers, mental health, DCF and teachers maintain regular contact share knowledge and resources.

Page 21: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

Supporting Positive Behaviors in the classroom

Preventative measures are critical

•Greet the child when they enter the room.

•Ask how their night and morning went.

•Schedule time with the identified advocate on a regular basis. Daily is ideal.

Page 22: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

Recognize potential times of stress for students and plan.

• Test taking is often stressful. Plan for this.

• Transitions are often unsettling. Plan for this.

•Unstructured activities i.e. recess, art class, gym are challenging. Plan for this.

Page 23: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

What can advocates do?• Listen to the youth.

• Collaborate with each other.

• Help build a support network for the youth.

• Plan and set goals with the youth.

• Recognize when a youth is struggling.

• Know your role and refer youth to other supports when appropriate.

• Be a consistent presence in the youth’s life.

Page 24: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

Self Advocacy

• Teach the youth to be his or her best support for what is important for a successful education experience.

• Help youth identify their strengths and challenges.

• Recommended that self-advocacy training begins in 7th or 8th grade.

Page 25: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

Educational Stability for Youth in Care

• Educational Best Interest Determination form assists that child’s team with making the important decision about where the child should attend school (depending on where they live) and what their needs and strengths are.

• The MOU between DCF and AOE allows for a child to remain stable even when they do not reside in the same town as their home school.

Page 26: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

Vermont Ed Stability Data

Page 27: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

Enhancing Resiliency

•Stable connections, familiar environment, and predictability are key.

• If coping skills are more developed, a child is much more resilient.

•To heal, traumatized youth must feel safe in their bodies.

Page 28: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

Local Families Keep Kids Local• School personnel know their communities and families.

• You know who the children’s friends are.

• Help DCF make these connections for the children who are in need.

• Well respected and supported Caregivers are the best advocates for children and youth in care.

KEEP LOCAL KIDS LOCAL

Page 29: Ensuring Educational Stability, Continuity, & Success of Children in Foster Care

Joan RockResource Coordinator, Morrisville District

[email protected]

www.vtfutres.org