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March 2012Vol. 13, No. 2Youths' Perception of College Preparedness

Youth aging out of foster care are more optimistic about entering college, are less prepared to engage in college, and earn lower grades in their first semester when compared to all incoming freshmen, according to a new study published in Children and Youth Services Review. The authors of the study examined the perceptions and experiences of 81 freshmen enrolled in Western Michigan University's program for current and former foster youth, which offers tuition assistance and 24-hour support throughout their college career.

Youth who had been or were in foster care were more academically and socially motivated to enter college than their peers, which was demonstrated in such ways as:

  • More positive attitudes toward educators and interest in intellectual activities
  • Better perceived study skills, leadership qualities, and self-reliance
  • A stronger desire to finish college

Other findings include:

  • With the exception of career counseling, foster youth were more open to student services than their peers.
  • Foster youth were similar to their peers in academic confidence and several areas of coping but felt they had less family support.
  • Forty-seven percent of foster youth withdrew from one or more courses in their first semester, compared to 18 percent of all freshmen.
  • Foster youth earned a GPA of 2.34 in their first semester, compared to 2.85 for all freshmen—however, this difference was consistent with incoming ACT and high-school GPA scores.

The study's authors encourage child welfare and education professionals to target services to the areas in which foster youth pursuing higher education need the most support, especially right before and during their first semester in college. Because of the optimism many foster youth feel upon entering college, the authors suggest that caseworkers focus on engaging and supporting youth at this critical time to promote their overall success.

"Readiness for College Engagement Among Students Who Have Aged Out of Foster Care," by Y. A. Unrau, S. A. Font, and G. Rawls, was published in Children and Youth Services Review, 34(1), and is available on the ScienceDirect website:

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0190740911003379