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Elizabeth Lyttle; Paul McCafferty; Brian J. Taylor – Child Care in Practice, 2024
Context: Adoption can provide a lifetime of benefits for children. Some adoptions however, experience severe challenges resulting in disruption, with children leaving home prematurely. Method: This qualitative study in Northern Ireland used interviews with parents from thirteen families whose adoptions had disrupted, to explore their perspective…
Descriptors: Adoption, Parent Attitudes, Social Services, Family Relationship
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Ferow, Aime – European Journal of Educational Sciences, 2019
Children experience grief and loss from death, divorce, parental incarceration, and similar situations of being placed in foster care or adoption. These youths may be challenged in recovery due to lacking the necessary life experience and coping skills. They may also lack the appropriate support networks to work through their grief as their…
Descriptors: Grief, Death, Divorce, Foster Care
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Matthews, Jessica A. K.; Tirella, Linda G.; Germann, Emma S.; Miller, Laurie C. – Early Child Development and Care, 2016
Many of the >339,000 international adoptees arriving in the USA during the last 25 years are now teenagers and young adults (YA). Information about their long-term social integration, school performance, and self-esteem is incomplete. Moreover, the relation of these outcomes to facets of family function is incompletely understood. We…
Descriptors: Adoption, Adolescents, Young Adults, Social Integration
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Fineran, Kerrie R. – Family Journal: Counseling and Therapy for Couples and Families, 2012
Working with children and adolescents in the foster care system whose biological parents' parental rights have been, or are soon to be, terminated can present numerous challenges for counselors. Children in these situations often struggle with identification of conflicting feelings, grief resulting from the absence of the parent/parents, and…
Descriptors: Adoption, Foster Care, Parents, Grief
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Juffer, Femmie; van IJzendoorn, Marinus H. – Psychological Bulletin, 2007
Do adopted children show lower self-esteem than nonadopted peers, and do transracial adoptees show lower self-esteem than same-race adoptees? Adopted children are hypothesized to be at risk of low self-esteem. They may suffer from the consequences of neglect, abuse, and malnutrition in institutions before adoption. They have to cope with their…
Descriptors: Adoption, Self Esteem, Meta Analysis, Racial Factors
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Daniluk, Judith C.; Tench, Elizabeth – Journal of Counseling & Development, 2007
A 33-month longitudinal study was conducted with 38 infertile couples making the transition to biological childlessness after unsuccessful fertility treatments. Changes in their levels of psychological distress; marital, sexual, and life satisfaction; and self-esteem were examined. Increased self-esteem and decreased sexual satisfaction were…
Descriptors: Physical Health, Childlessness, Longitudinal Studies, Psychological Patterns
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Baden, Amanda L.; O'Leary Wiley, Mary – Counseling Psychologist, 2007
For the past 50 years, adults who were adopted during infancy have been research participants for empirical studies with goals ranging from twin studies for heritability, to adjustment following adoption, to attachment. While the research body is broad, it has given little attention to counseling practices with adopted adults. Because empirical…
Descriptors: Adoption, Counseling Techniques, Adults, Adjustment (to Environment)