Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Floella Benjamin
Floella Benjamin has argued that increasing the number of care leavers in higher education is something we should all get behind. Photograph: Getty Images for Solt
Floella Benjamin has argued that increasing the number of care leavers in higher education is something we should all get behind. Photograph: Getty Images for Solt

Adopted children also need help breaking the ‘care ceiling’

This article is more than 7 months old

Adopted children experience many of the same issues in education as children in care, notes Kimberly Clarke

Ten cheers for Floella Benjamin, Civitas and the cross-party group of peers behind the report Breaking the Care Ceiling (Young people leave care, then are hung out to dry. Why don’t we help them get to university instead?, 11 September). However, I would urge them – and anyone who is considering the issues involved – to expand their work to explicitly include adopted children.

There is no doubt that children who are adopted have better outcomes than those who spend a lot of their young lives in care, but it is a widely believed myth that adoption magically erases or reverses the trauma that children have been through, and often continue to experience as they try to make sense of their lives.

Adopted children are 20 times more likely to be excluded from school than their peers. This in itself is evidence that adopted children experience many of the same issues in education as children in care, but often there is an expectation from professionals (educators and others) that they don’t deserve different treatment.
Kimberly Clarke
Exeter

Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.

Most viewed

Most viewed