Promoting school readiness in foster children

Foster children are at great risk for poor school outcomes. Given their experiences of early stress and maltreatment, these children might have particular vulnerabilities that decrease the likelihood of a successful transition to elementary school. They are likely to have difficulties with self-regulation, which may interfere with their abilities to relate to peers, to maintain focused attention, to follow directions, and to acquire academic skills. Foster children might also be at a disadvantage in terms of caregiver involvement in school, an important predictor of early school success. This chapter reviews a number of preventive intervention programs designed for at-risk children and one targeted at foster children in particular. The success of these programs at preparing children for school and the long-terms benefits of such programs suggest that interventions targeting school readiness specifically in foster children may be a way to deflect these children from trajectories of school failure.

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