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Telling the Truth to Your Adopted or Foster Child Making Sense of the Past
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Illustrations by Jack G. and Kristi Anne Kammer
Book Code: G691
ISBN: 0-89789-691-2
ISBN-13: 978-0-89789-691-7
256 pages, figures
Bergin & Garvey Trade
Publication: 7/30/2000
List Price: $26.95 (UK Sterling Price: £14.95)
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Paperback
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects: Awards:
  • North American Resource Center for Child Welfare's, Pro Humanitate Medal, 2000
Reviews:
  • [A] clear and helpful guide for parents and others who work with adopted children. How to gather information about the birth family and how to present that information to a child in age-appropriate increments are lucidly explained. Suggested techniques are detailed and explicit, taking into careful consideration the life stage of the adopted child, including adolescence. Each chapter concludes with questions for readers so they may apply information to their specific case--a helpful device. This excellent book deserves a place in public libraries because it advocates a constant policy of truth to remove the vestiges of shame and secrecy from adoption.
    —Library Journal
  • This well written book would be a fantastic resource to any adoptive or foster parent considering whether to, or how to, tell their child about their early history.
    —Youth In Mind
    November 2007
  • Endorsement From Madelyn Freudlich
    Executive Director
    The Evan B. Donaldson Adoption Institute:
    Beautifully assists adoptive and foster parents in unraveling the mysteries that can cause so much pain for adopted persons--as children, adolescents and adults--and their families. With sensitivity and remarkable insight, Keefer and Schooler skillfully tackle the hard issues with which foster and adoptive parents struggle in deciding to tell and telling their children their true histories. It is an indispensable resource, combining a rich understanding of the psychological complexities of adoption with straight-forward guidance that foster and adoptive parents will treasure.
  • Endorsement From Betsie Norris
    Executive Director
    Adoption Network:
    There is a great need for this book and I feel the authors do a wonderful job of giving clear guidelines and examples that adoptive parents can follow to explain even the most difficult of adoption-related circumstances to their children. This book gives parents the concrete tools they need to share information openly and honestly in words their children can understand. Adoption has gone through such a transition over the past 10 to 20 years, and the situations that the children are coming from is often so much more complex, parents need this type of guidance and support. For adoptees, accurate information and facts about themselves and their past are critical, this book gives parents the input and direction they need to build healthy communication and relationships. The authors have given a great gift to the adoption community--this book is a must read for all adoptive parents.
  • Endorsement From Gregory C.Keck
    Psychologist
    Founder/Director of the Attachment of the Bonding Center of Ohio
    Coauthor of Adopting the Hurt Child:
    Finally, a book which talks about telling adoptive children the WHOLE truth! Keefer and Schooler do an excellent job of presenting just why the truth--with all of its details--can help heal the hurt child. Adoptive families will find this book helpful as they struggle with how to share the good, the bad, and the ugly with their children. It will help them avoid deceiving their child about his or her past. A must read for parents of traumatized children.
Description: Telling a child he or she is adopted can be a trying task, but this is only the first step. After becoming aware that he or she is adopted, the child will question the details of the adoption. The truth may reveal details that are painful and sometimes traumatic: a parent is in prison, a drug addict, or even a rapist. In Telling the Truth to Your Adopted or Foster Child, Keefer and Schooler demonstrate that in even the most difficult situations, foster and adoptive parents must not withhold or distort information about the past. Though sometimes including difficult truths, communication between a caregiver or parent and foster or adopted child can help a child grow up into an emotionally and psychologically healthy adult. Providing help for parents or caregivers wishing to productively communicate with their child, Keefer and Schooler answer such questions as: How do I share difficult information about my child's adoption in a sensitive manner? When is the right time to tell my child the whole truth? How do I find further information on my child's history? Age appropriate guidelines will make an arduous task organized and easier. Detailed descriptions of actual cases help the parent or caregiver find ways to discover the truth (particularly in closed and international adoption cases), organize the truth, and explain the truth gently to a toddler, child, or young adult that may be horrified by it. Parents, teachers, counselors, and other caregivers will come away from this reading with a sharper knowledge of how to make sense of the past for foster and adopted children of all ages.
Table of Contents:
  • Preface
  • The Power of Secrets on Family Relationships
  • Truth or Consequences: A Great Debate
  • Just the Facts, Ma'am: Why do Children Need Them?
  • A Fact-Finding Mission: How to Gather What You Need to Know
  • Adoption Through a Child's Eyes: Developmental Stages
  • Through a Parent's Eyes: Core Issues, Coping Styles, and Communication
  • The Ten Commandments of Telling: Principles to Consider
  • Sharing the Hard Stuff: The Adoptive Parent's Challenge
  • Tools of Communication Between Parents and Children
  • Transracial or Transcultural Adoption: Talking About Adoption Within a Minority Families
  • Kinship Foster Care and Adoption: Telling the Truth When It's "All in the Family"
  • Opening a Closed Adoption for School-Age Children: Questions Most Asked by Parents
  • Adolescence--Chronic but Not Terminal: Keeping Lines of Communications Open
  • Opening a Closed Adoption--The Teenage Years
  • Communicating about Adoption in the Classroom: Teaching the Teachers
  • Epilogue
  • Bibliography
  • Index
LC Card Number: 99-056451
LCC Class: HV875
Dewey Class: 155
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