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Communication Breakdown

Decent Essays

Communication Breakdown:
The Role of Interagency Communication in the Academic Achievement of Foster Youth
Farrah Mitchell
Ashford University

Chapter 1: Background Context Recent research has made clear that children in foster care represent one of the most vulnerable populations in public education. Though there have been few national studies studying the overall achievement of foster youth, various state and local investigations invariably reveal a picture of personal struggle, over- or under-identified disabilities, developmental delays, absenteeism, and chronic underperformance relative to peers who are not in foster care. In Washington state, foster children scored 15 to 20 percentile points below their peers on standardized …show more content…

Because of this mix of confusion, lack of effective cross-agency communication, and incentives brought about by a lack of viable alternate educational resources other than special education, studies have found both underidentification and overidentification problems with foster youth and special education services. Moreover, even those who are appropriately diagnosed often receive poorly written individualized education plans (IEPs) that are often dropped or ignored when the student moves to a different district (Vacca, 2008). One study found that in Oregon, although 39 percent of foster youth had received IEPs, only 16 percent actually received services (White, Carrington, & Freeman, as cited in Ayasse, 1995). Clearly, special education is a point of particular importance and contention for students in foster care. Studies have quantified the negative impact on foster youth through other means beyond academic performance and placement. Due to traumatic past experiences with family, prenatal exposure to drugs and alcohol, neglect, abuse, or a combination of these and other factors, foster youth display a high incidence of emotional or behavioral problems. Many foster youth have difficulty developing fulfilling relationships, resulting in frustration. In one study that made use of self-reporting surveys, nearly nine in ten foster youth described problems with anger management, violence, and aggression, and 70 percent reported

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