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  2. Orphanage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orphanage

    The benefit of foster care over orphanages is disputed. One significant study carried out by Duke University concluded that institutional care in America in the 20th century produced the same health, emotional, intellectual, mental, and physical outcomes as care by relatives, and better than care in the homes of strangers. [25]

  3. Foster care in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foster_care_in_the_United...

    The Children's Aid Society started the Orphan Train Movement in 1853 to help the homeless, abused, and orphaned children living on the streets of New York City; the beginning of the modern-day foster care system in the United States. Jacob Riis' "Street Arabs in Sleeping Quarters 1890." Mulberry Street in Manhattan.

  4. Foster care - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foster_care

    Children of the United Kingdom's Child Migration Programme – many of whom were placed in foster care in Australia. Foster care is a system in which a minor has been placed into a ward, group home (residential child care community or treatment centre), or private home of a state-certified caregiver, referred to as a "foster parent", or with a family member approved by the state.

  5. Residential child care community - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Residential_child_care...

    The other part of the debate is more financially motivated, as residential child care facilities are more costly than foster care, adoption, wrap-around services and kinship care. [17] Studies show that the foster system can cause and enforce mental issues, as every additional movement a child has to go through increases the probability of these.

  6. Adoption in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adoption_in_the_United_States

    The United States foster care system enables adults to care for minor children who are not able to live with their biological parents. If a child in the U.S. governmental foster care system is not adopted or returned to the custody of their birth parents by the age of 18 years, they are aged out of the system on their 18th birthday. To help ...

  7. Texas’ foster care crisis is improving. Here’s how lawmakers ...

    www.aol.com/texas-foster-care-crisis-getting...

    Texas needs to continue the progress made updating the foster care funding system so that it reflects the true cost of effective services, helps maintain an experienced and dedicated workforce and ...

  8. Fosterage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fosterage

    Fosterage, the practice of a family bringing up a child not their own, differs from adoption in that the child's parents, not the foster-parents, remain the acknowledged parents. In many modern western societies foster care can be organised by the state to care for children with troubled family backgrounds, usually on a temporary basis.

  9. State keeps benefits intended for foster kids. A push is on ...

    www.aol.com/state-keeps-benefits-intended-foster...

    Hayes then gave lawmakers some statistics backed up by the National Foster Youth Institute: Fewer than half of foster kids graduate high school and only 3 percent get a college degree.