Progression or Perpetuation?

An organization called Casey Family Programs has produced several new ads about foster care that have shown up on television and the sides of buses here in the Austin area.

Picture of a young boy, with a caption that says I have twice the rate of post-traumatic stress disorder than veterans of the first Gulf War

The website for the campaign is here: "Raisemeup.org"

The campaign highlights the possible futures facing children in the foster care system, futures which include high rates of homelessness, PTSD, and crime. The hook is that you "don't have to raise a child to raise them up"--that is, there are many ways to give these kids help besides fostering and adopting.

This is certainly true--there is so much that needs to be done to help these kids face the often insurmountable obstacles, and the efforts of the Casey Family Programs to get more people more involved can only help. But in a conversation with a woman who has lived through the foster care system, we debated whether these ads help progress our attitudes about foster kids, or perpetuate stereotypes of these kids as "problems".

It's not that they aren't troubled, who wouldn't be? Many kids, especially older ones, go through multiple placements. The woman I know remembers 11 homes; there may have been more. If you're not adopted, at age 18, you're done. No more homes, no more case workers providing even minimal continuity. This kid with little knowledge of functioning relationships, who's spent the past several years with no family, is told to get a job and make it work. So high rates of homelessness and crime are to be expected.

This very, very simplified account is some of the background that we don't see in the ads. And I'm not convinced all viewers need to see it. But those who have only a passing concern for this issue (I understand everyone has priorities) only see that one image: foster kid = societal problem. Is that enough to get people involved?

Comments

Children

Thanks for your post, Sarah. I would add that one thing I like about this poster is that it does not show some cuddly baby or toddler, thereby making a pathetic appeal to help these children. I totally hear what you are saying about the ways in which this ad might foster stereotypes about foster kids (woops), but I also like that it makes them real. They deserve help not because they are cute, but because they are human. In a way, I think this young man's face conveys this message to me.

Reality

You're absolutely right. That struck me the most, the absolute reality of the situation--both the kids' and the people the ad would like to help out. They need more help than you think, and you can give more help than you think.

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