Transition-Age Youth in Out-of-Home Care: Predictors of Readiness Skills for Adulthood

Objectives: Youth who age out of the child welfare system are among the most vulnerable group of young people entering adulthood today. Unlike their generational peers, foster youth lack the familial supports necessary to postpone major life decisions and gradually enter adulthood. Although there ar...

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Main Author: Woltman, Heather Ann
Other Authors: Hunsley, John
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/37914
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-22172
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spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-379142018-07-26T05:29:32Z Transition-Age Youth in Out-of-Home Care: Predictors of Readiness Skills for Adulthood Woltman, Heather Ann Hunsley, John Child welfare Transition readiness Risk factors Protective factors Objectives: Youth who age out of the child welfare system are among the most vulnerable group of young people entering adulthood today. Unlike their generational peers, foster youth lack the familial supports necessary to postpone major life decisions and gradually enter adulthood. Although there are notable differences between Canadian and American child welfare contexts, young people exiting both systems experience a compressed transition and are tasked with quickly managing adult responsibilities. Few studies have examined pre-transition factors that correlate with adolescents’ readiness skills prior to exiting out-of-home care. Methods: This dissertation presents two studies that examine factors associated with transition-age foster youths’ readiness skills for adulthood. In the first study I used cross-sectional data (n = 278) from Illinois, United States to assess the impact of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) on youths’ independent living skills and life domain functioning. I hypothesized that exposure to ACEs would predict lower transition readiness, and that trauma-related stress symptoms and strengths would moderate this association. In the second study I used cross-sectional data (n = 1,026) from Ontario, Canada to identify youth-, placement-, and agency-level factors that predicted youths’ self-care and financial literacy skills. I hypothesized that factors most proximal to individuals would impact readiness (e.g., academic performance, self-esteem). Results: Hierarchical regression analyses indicated that ACEs predicted lower transition readiness. Traumatic stress symptoms moderated these relations, and engagement in risky behaviours partially mediated these relations (study 1). Hierarchical linear modelling indicated that agency-level differences did not impact readiness. In contrast, general linear modelling indicated that a subset of individual- and placement-level factors did impact readiness. Specifically, higher academic performance, higher self-esteem, a greater number of developmental assets, older age, an older age of entry into care, a greater number of placement transitions, and kinship care placement predicted higher transition readiness. A greater number of socioemotional difficulties, a greater number of long-term mental and/or physical health conditions, and a lower frequency of problematic parenting practices combined with a higher frequency of effective parenting practices predicted lower transition readiness (study 2). Conclusion: Findings illustrated that although ACEs exposure predicts lower adult readiness among transition-age youth, whether youth engage in risky behaviours and possess developmental strengths may be better predictors of their readiness to age out of care (study 1). Findings also illustrated that a subset of individual- and placement-level factors predict self-sufficiency skills among transition-age youth (study 2). 2018-07-25T13:46:22Z 2018-07-25T13:46:22Z 2018-07-25 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/37914 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-22172 en application/pdf Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Child welfare
Transition readiness
Risk factors
Protective factors
spellingShingle Child welfare
Transition readiness
Risk factors
Protective factors
Woltman, Heather Ann
Transition-Age Youth in Out-of-Home Care: Predictors of Readiness Skills for Adulthood
description Objectives: Youth who age out of the child welfare system are among the most vulnerable group of young people entering adulthood today. Unlike their generational peers, foster youth lack the familial supports necessary to postpone major life decisions and gradually enter adulthood. Although there are notable differences between Canadian and American child welfare contexts, young people exiting both systems experience a compressed transition and are tasked with quickly managing adult responsibilities. Few studies have examined pre-transition factors that correlate with adolescents’ readiness skills prior to exiting out-of-home care. Methods: This dissertation presents two studies that examine factors associated with transition-age foster youths’ readiness skills for adulthood. In the first study I used cross-sectional data (n = 278) from Illinois, United States to assess the impact of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) on youths’ independent living skills and life domain functioning. I hypothesized that exposure to ACEs would predict lower transition readiness, and that trauma-related stress symptoms and strengths would moderate this association. In the second study I used cross-sectional data (n = 1,026) from Ontario, Canada to identify youth-, placement-, and agency-level factors that predicted youths’ self-care and financial literacy skills. I hypothesized that factors most proximal to individuals would impact readiness (e.g., academic performance, self-esteem). Results: Hierarchical regression analyses indicated that ACEs predicted lower transition readiness. Traumatic stress symptoms moderated these relations, and engagement in risky behaviours partially mediated these relations (study 1). Hierarchical linear modelling indicated that agency-level differences did not impact readiness. In contrast, general linear modelling indicated that a subset of individual- and placement-level factors did impact readiness. Specifically, higher academic performance, higher self-esteem, a greater number of developmental assets, older age, an older age of entry into care, a greater number of placement transitions, and kinship care placement predicted higher transition readiness. A greater number of socioemotional difficulties, a greater number of long-term mental and/or physical health conditions, and a lower frequency of problematic parenting practices combined with a higher frequency of effective parenting practices predicted lower transition readiness (study 2). Conclusion: Findings illustrated that although ACEs exposure predicts lower adult readiness among transition-age youth, whether youth engage in risky behaviours and possess developmental strengths may be better predictors of their readiness to age out of care (study 1). Findings also illustrated that a subset of individual- and placement-level factors predict self-sufficiency skills among transition-age youth (study 2).
author2 Hunsley, John
author_facet Hunsley, John
Woltman, Heather Ann
author Woltman, Heather Ann
author_sort Woltman, Heather Ann
title Transition-Age Youth in Out-of-Home Care: Predictors of Readiness Skills for Adulthood
title_short Transition-Age Youth in Out-of-Home Care: Predictors of Readiness Skills for Adulthood
title_full Transition-Age Youth in Out-of-Home Care: Predictors of Readiness Skills for Adulthood
title_fullStr Transition-Age Youth in Out-of-Home Care: Predictors of Readiness Skills for Adulthood
title_full_unstemmed Transition-Age Youth in Out-of-Home Care: Predictors of Readiness Skills for Adulthood
title_sort transition-age youth in out-of-home care: predictors of readiness skills for adulthood
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/37914
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-22172
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