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This information has been directly taken from Child Welfare Information Gateway
Now that you have adopted a child and life is beginning to settle down, you may find your thoughts moving to the future. When shall I tell my child that s/he is adopted? How will s/he feel about it? At what point will s/he want more information? What will s/he want to know from me? How can I help my child feel comfortable about being adopted?
Whether children are adopted as infants or when they are older, whether they are healthy or have physical or psychological problems, their adoption is bound to influence their development. You need to understand how and why.
Learning about the developmental stages of children and what can be expected in each stage is important to all new parents. When your child has been adopted, there are additional considerations. In these pages, we will be looking at specific issues—separation, loss, anger, grief, and identity—and show how they are expressed as your adopted child grows up. Some of these issues will be obvious in all stages of development; others surface at specific times. The more thoroughly you can understand how your child behaves and why, the more likely it is that you can be supportive and help your child to grow up with healthy self-esteem and the knowledge that s/he is loved.
While the stages described below correspond generally to a child's chronological age, your child's development may vary significantly. Some children progress more quickly from one stage to another; others may continue certain behaviors long past the time you would have expected. Still others may be substantially delayed in entering and moving through new stages. Many characteristics of adolescence, for instance, may not even appear until your child's twenties and may persist until your child's identity has formed.
Contents
- 1 Ages and Stages
- 1.1 Adoption Parenting: Newborn and Infant
- 1.2 Adoption Parenting: Toddler
- 1.3 Adoption Parenting: Preschool
- 1.4 Adoption Parenting: Grade School
- 1.5 Adoption Parenting: Preteen
- 1.6 Adoption Parenting: Teenage Years
- 1.6.1 Understanding Teenage Development and the Impact of Adoption
- 1.6.2 Communicating with Your Teenager About Adoption
- 1.6.3 Helping You Teenager Communicate with Others About Adoption
- 1.6.4 Disciplining Effectively
- 1.6.5 Preparing Your Teenager for Adulthood
- 1.6.6 Seeking Help for Mental Concerns
- 1.7 Adoption Parenting: Young Adults
- 2 Additional Adoption Parenting Information
Ages and Stages
Adoption Parenting: Newborn and Infant
What to Expect the First Year
The primary task of a baby is to develop a sense of trust in the world and come to view it as a place that is predictable and reliable.
Adoption Parenting: Toddler
What to Expect the Second Year
Toddlers continue the attachment and separation cycle in more sophisticated ways in the second year.
Adoption Parenting: Preschool
Adoption and Child Development
It is important to understand the typical developmental tasks and needs of preschoolers, as well as how adoption-related experiences may affect your child.
Communication About Adoption
Parents who project an attitude of acceptance and comfort with adoption are better able to help their children explore their own feelings and fears.
Discipline Considerations
The purpose of discipline is to teach, re-teach, and assist children in developing their own internal controls.
Adoption Parenting: Grade School
Understanding Child Development and the Impact of Adoption
School-aged children go through many significant developmental changes. It is important for parents to understand the typical tasks and needs of school-aged children as well as how adoption-related experiences may affect children.
Communicating About Adoption
Parents who feel good about adoption, are comfortable talking about it, and can openly acknowledge their child’s feelings are best able to help their children do the same.
Disciplining Effectively
The purpose of discipline is to teach children acceptable behavior and how to develop their own internal controls. Discipline should take into account your child’s abilities, learning styles, and family history.
Improving Your Child's School Experience
Being adopted can affect your child’s school experience. Peers may pose innocent questions that cause hurt feelings, or they may tease an adopted child about being adopted.
Seeking Help for Mental Health Concerns
Adoptive families, like other families, sometimes need help to address mental health concerns. Sadness, anger, and behavior challenges are normal as children in grade school learn more about their family histories and come to terms with adoption.
Adoption Parenting: Preteen
Psychological Identification
If your child has had several homes before yours, there is often a brief honeymoon period where s/he will try to be perfect to ensure your love. But soon the sense of loss, hurt, and anger surfaces.
Adoption Parenting: Teenage Years
Understanding Teenage Development and the Impact of Adoption
Thirteen- to nineteen-year-olds experience rapid physical and hormonal growth.
Communicating with Your Teenager About Adoption
Adopted teenagers wonder about their birth families and think about adoption more than most parents realize. They need parents who are comfortable talking about adoption, who aren’t threatened or hurt by the discussion, and who can help answer their questions and discover information about their pasts.
Helping You Teenager Communicate with Others About Adoption
Being adopted can affect peer interactions. Teens are capable of more sophisticated understanding and discussions about adoption, but they can be quite narrow in their judgments.
Disciplining Effectively
As teenagers assert their emerging identities and independence, while also navigating peer pressures, they frequently will test the boundaries of family rules.
Preparing Your Teenager for Adulthood
An important part of parenting teenagers is creating the conditions in which they can master adult tasks and take on greater independence.
Seeking Help for Mental Concerns
For many adopted persons, growing up in an adoptive family involves some additional complications and challenges.
Adoption Parenting: Young Adults
Postadoption Issues
Adopted persons may deal with a range of issues at different points in their lives.
Openness, Searching, and Access to Family History
Being placed for adoption does not necessarily mean an adopted person will never be able to contact his or her birth parents again.
Managing Adoption Issues
Most adopted adults overcome any adoption-related issues they experience during childhood and adolescence and are as well-adjusted as nonadopted persons.
Additional Resources
Several nonprofit membership organizations provide education, advocacy, and support for families touched by adoption.
Additional Adoption Parenting Information
Openness in Adoption
Open adoption allows adoptive parents, and often the adopted child, to interact with the child’s birth parents. Openness can vary greatly from family to family and may change over time. Open adoption is becoming increasingly common, in part due to a growing recognition of the potential benefits of allowing an adopted child or youth to establish or maintain connections with his or her birth family. To support adoptive families in considering and maintaining open adoption, this factsheet describes various levels of openness, potential benefits, important considerations, and tips for building and strengthening open relationships.1
- What is Open Adoption?
- Trends Toward Increasing Openness
- Benefits of Open Adoption
- Deciding Whether Open Adoption is Right for Your Family
- Building and Maintaining Relationships with You Child's Birth Family
- Using Social Media for Contact with Birth Families
- Resources for More Information
Visit Special Needs to find out more about physical, mental, and emotional disabilities.
Return to Adoption Wiki
Resource
Child Welfare Information Gateway. A service of the Children's Bureau, Administration for Children and Families, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Citations
1 While this factsheet includes information primarily for adoptive parents, it also may be of interest to birth parents. Pregnant women thinking about placing their child for adoption also may be interested in Open Adoption: Could Open Adoption Be the Best Choice for You and Your Baby? available from https://www.childwelfare.gov/adoption/birth/for/
Trying to add some more content
Biography
1975 -
Actress
Angelina Jolie in an American actress most known for her roles in films Changeling (2008), Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005), Salt (2010), and Wanted (2008). In 2000, she won an Oscar for Best Actress in a Supporting Role for Girl, Interrupted (1999), and in 2014 she won the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award.
After spending time in Cambiodia for a film, Jolie become more aware of the poverty and need in third world countries. Shortly after, she began visiting other poverty-stricken countries and then was formally appointed as A Goodwill Ambassador for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in 2001.
Jolie adopted Maddox, a Cambodian boy, in 2002, then in 2005 adopted a girl named Zahara from Ethiopia. Brad Pitt and Jolie announced that they were going to have a baby together, and Jolie then gave birth to a baby girl, Shiloh, in May of 2006. Pitt and Jolie also adopted Pax, a 3-year-old Vietnamese boy.[1] In 2008, Jolie gave birth to twins, a boy named Knox and a girl named Vivienne.[2]
This information has been directly taken from Child Welfare Information Gateway
Now that you have adopted a child and life is beginning to settle down, you may find your thoughts moving to the future. When shall I tell my child that s/he is adopted? How will s/he feel about it? At what point will s/he want more information? What will s/he want to know from me? How can I help my child feel comfortable about being adopted?
Whether children are adopted as infants or when they are older, whether they are healthy or have physical or psychological problems, their adoption is bound to influence their development. You need to understand how and why.
Learning about the developmental stages of children and what can be expected in each stage is important to all new parents. When your child has been adopted, there are additional considerations. In these pages, we will be looking at specific issues—separation, loss, anger, grief, and identity—and show how they are expressed as your adopted child grows up. Some of these issues will be obvious in all stages of development; others surface at specific times. The more thoroughly you can understand how your child behaves and why, the more likely it is that you can be supportive and help your child to grow up with healthy self-esteem and the knowledge that s/he is loved.
While the stages described below correspond generally to a child's chronological age, your child's development may vary significantly. Some children progress more quickly from one stage to another; others may continue certain behaviors long past the time you would have expected. Still others may be substantially delayed in entering and moving through new stages. Many characteristics of adolescence, for instance, may not even appear until your child's twenties and may persist until your child's identity has formed.
Recently, I’ve seen a series of t-shirts pop up on my Facebook newsfeed concerning adoption. One t-shirt boasts, “I’m an adoptive mom. Just like a normal dad, except much cooler.” Another reads, “Some people never get to meet their hero. I adopted mine.” November is National Adoption Awareness Month and I am really, really proud of what our open adoptions look like. I feel secure that the children who have been placed in our family are thriving with us. I feel certain that we do our very best to keep our relationships very healthy with their birth families, treating them with genuine love and respect. I love adoption, and if anyone wants to talk to me about it, I’m happy to have an honest discussion of what adoption looks like to our family, how blessed we are by our kids, and what amazing people I’ve met because of adoption. But what I’m never going to do is parade around in one of those t-shirts in front of my children, announcing that they are adopted. I’m also never going to proclaim that I’m cool because I adopted, nor that my child is expected to act like a hero because he was adopted. My child is not my savior; she is my child. I am not cooler because I’m an adoptive mom; I’m simply a mom who rocks a ponytail 99% of the time and who gets to work most days and realizes there’s a smear on my pants right where my child wrapped his arms around my legs and hugged me that morning.
Jolie adopted Maddox, a Cambodian boy, in 2002, then in 2005 adopted a girl named Zahara from Ethiopia. Brad Pitt and Jolie announced that they were going to have a baby together, and Jolie then gave birth to a baby girl, Shiloh, in May of 2006. Pitt and Jolie also adopted Pax, a 3-year-old Vietnamese boy.[3] In 2008, Jolie gave birth to twins, a boy named Knox and a girl named Vivienne.[4]
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