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Publication Date: April 01, 2008 Permanent Link: http://www.urban.org/url.cfm?ID=1001174 The nonpartisan Urban Institute publishes studies, reports, and books on timely topics worthy of public consideration. The views expressed are those of the authors and should not be attributed to the Urban Institute, its trustees, or its funders. The text below is an introduction to the complete document. Read the full report in PDF format. AbstractThis study examines employment outcomes for youth who age out of foster care through their middle twenties in three states: California, Minnesota, and North Carolina. The study linked child welfare, Unemployment Insurance (UI), and public assistance administrative data to assess outcomes. Results suggest that youth who age out of foster care continue to experience poor employment outcomes at age 24 and generally follow one of four employment trajectories as they transition to adulthood. IntroductionA youth’s departure from home marks the beginning of adulthood and a new stage in life. This critical juncture and the surrounding years, often referred to as the “transition to adulthood,” is increasingly being recognized as a distinct developmental stage between adolescence and adulthood (Arnett, 2004). Youth who reach this stage and are living in foster care are often at a significant disadvantage. In 2005, over 24,000 youths found themselves in this circumstance (DHHS, 2006). They “aged out” of the foster care system and entered into the world of adulthood relatively alone. Research suggests these youth do not fare well. Youth who age out of foster care often have bouts of homelessness, criminal activity, and incarceration (Courtney, Piliavin, and Grogan- Kaylor, 1998; Courtney, Piliavin, Grogan-Kaylor, and Nesmith, 2001). Many suffer from physical and mental health challenges as a result of past abuse or neglect. A primary task in transitioning to adulthood, and the focus of this report, is finding and sustaining employment. Studies of former foster youth who age out of foster care find that these youth generally experience high unemployment, unstable employment patterns, and earn very low incomes in the period between ages 18 and 21 (Cook, 1991; Courtney et al., 2001; Dworsky and Courtney, 2001; Goerge, Bilaver, Lee, Needell, Brookhart and Jackman, 2002). Studies also document consistently low rates of high school completion and welfare receipt (Courtney et al., 1998; Courtney et al., 2001; Festinger, 1983; McMillen and Tucker, 1999; Pecora, Kessler, Williams, O’Brien, Downs, English, et al., 2003). What is less known about these youth is how they fare in their mid-twenties, after they have made the initial transition into adulthood. It might be hypothesized that some would experience unstable employment in their initial attempts to connect to the workforce, but that these patterns would stabilize when youth reached their mid-twenties. If these patterns do not stabilize, however, addressing job readiness and educational needs early in the transition to adulthood may be important to shaping the future trajectories of these youth. The Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) requested this study to examine employment and earnings outcomes for youth, through their mid-twenties, who age out of foster care. Key findings suggest:
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