Synopses & Reviews
This volume reports the results of a large-scale survey of families who adopted children with "special needs": older children, minority children, handicapped children, or sibling groups. It assesses perceptions of social work services, parent-child relationships, family functioning, child behavior, school performance, and other aspects of adoptive family life. Rosenthal and Groze compare outcomes for different types of adoptions, including adoptions of children of different ages, adoptions by minority families, transracial adoptions, single-parent adoptions, adoptions by less educated and less wealthy families, adoptions by foster parents, adoptions of children with handicaps, and sibling group adoptions.
Review
Adoption is one of several child welfare services that have undergone major policy and practice reforms in the past 20 years. The resulting emergence of special-needs adoption as a new social welfare program is best represented by the shift in focus from finding children for childless couples to finding families for children who need them. Special-needs adoption places older children, children of color, those who have physical or mental disabilities, and children in sibling groups with many different types of families. In this highly readable book, which reports on their study of 799 adoptive families, Rosenthal and Groze make an important contribution to understanding the families' experiences in adopting children who would formerly have been considered unadoptable. Their work confirms practice wisdom about the high rates of success and family satisfaction in special-needs adoption and underscores the need for highly specialized recruitment, preparation, and post-placement supports for adoptive families.Choice
Review
Rosenthal and Groze provide a valuable service by documenting, with richness and breadth, the outcomes of adoption and how they relate to the characteristics of adoptive parents and adopted children. By providing added insight into the relationship of the makeup of adoptive families and their outcomes, they are both able to raise further questions for researchers in this area as well as offer practice recommendations for practitioners in the area....It is important reading for anyone researching or practicing in this area.Children and Youth Services Review
Synopsis
This volume reports the results of a large-scale survey of families who adopted children with special needs: older children, minority children, handicapped children, or sibling groups. In contrast to much of the current literature which focuses on adoption disruption, this study shifts the focus of inquiry to intact families. It assesses perceptions of social work services, parent-child relationships, family functioning, child behavior, school performance, and other aspects of adoptive family life. Rosenthal and Groze compare outcomes for different types of adoptions, including adoptions of children of different ages, adoptions by minority families, transracial adoptions, single-parent adoptions, adoptions by less educated and less wealthy families, adoptions by foster parents, adoptions of children with handicaps, and sibling group adoptions.
The authors offer solid advice, based on their sample of 800 respondents, regarding various aspects of practice in the field of adoption, including selection of families, preparation of families and children, and useful follow-up services. Special-Needs Adoption is an invaluable tool for agencies developing adoption programs, and practitioners seeking the latest information regarding adoptive family dynamics.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [221]-232) and index.
Table of Contents
Foreword
Preface
Change and Challenge in Adoption
Study Design and Sample
An Overview of Findings: Promise and Optimism
Rewards and Difficulties: The Parents' Perspective
Voices of Adoptees: Five Personal Stories
Focus on Family Functioning
Focus on Single Parents
Focus on Minority Children and Families
Focus on Children with Handicaps
Focus on the Children's Behavior
Focus on Selected Topics
Practice Recommendations: Special-Needs Adoption in the 1990s
References
Index