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This episode provides an overview of an Annie E. Casey Foundation article titled "Foster Care Education Outcomes: New Research Challenges the 3% Myth," which re-evaluates the outdated statistic that only three percent of youth from foster care graduate from college. The article emphasizes that new research from 2000 to 2023 shows significantly higher, yet still challenging, educational attainment rates, including 69%–85% high school completion and 8%–12% college completion by their mid-to-late twenties. This progress is noted alongside the persistent challenges, such as unstable housing and loss of financial support at age twenty-one, which keep foster youth college success rates far behind their peers. Both practice and policy implications are discussed, advocating for extended foster care, campus support programs, and modernized financial aid to close the existing educational gaps and ensure better outcomes for young adults transitioning to independence.
Thank you for listening. We hope you will connect with us at DCfapac.org or email us at [email protected].
By Foster and Adoptive Parent Advocacy CenterThis episode provides an overview of an Annie E. Casey Foundation article titled "Foster Care Education Outcomes: New Research Challenges the 3% Myth," which re-evaluates the outdated statistic that only three percent of youth from foster care graduate from college. The article emphasizes that new research from 2000 to 2023 shows significantly higher, yet still challenging, educational attainment rates, including 69%–85% high school completion and 8%–12% college completion by their mid-to-late twenties. This progress is noted alongside the persistent challenges, such as unstable housing and loss of financial support at age twenty-one, which keep foster youth college success rates far behind their peers. Both practice and policy implications are discussed, advocating for extended foster care, campus support programs, and modernized financial aid to close the existing educational gaps and ensure better outcomes for young adults transitioning to independence.
Thank you for listening. We hope you will connect with us at DCfapac.org or email us at [email protected].