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Cited by 25 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…For example, Festinger's study of 227 children who had been in foster care in New York found that most of those in long-term foster care during childhood became productive, lawabiding citizens in their early 20s. Similar findings have also been reported by Maluccio and Fein (1985), and by Zimmerman (1982). Of course, correlational studies such as these prove nothing about the differential effectiveness of residential versus foster family care as the two options normally cater for quite different populations (Barber, 2000).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…For example, Festinger's study of 227 children who had been in foster care in New York found that most of those in long-term foster care during childhood became productive, lawabiding citizens in their early 20s. Similar findings have also been reported by Maluccio and Fein (1985), and by Zimmerman (1982). Of course, correlational studies such as these prove nothing about the differential effectiveness of residential versus foster family care as the two options normally cater for quite different populations (Barber, 2000).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…For example, Festinger's study of 227 children who had been in foster care in New York found that most of those in long-term foster care during childhood became productive, lawabiding citizens in their early 20s. Similar findings have also been reported by Maluccio and Fein (1985), and by Zimmerman (1982). Of course, correlational studies such as these prove nothing about the differential effectiveness of residential versus foster family care as the two options normally cater for quite different populations (Barber, 2000).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…Festinger (1983), in her study of 227 children who had been in foster care in New York for most of their childhood, found that in their early 20s they were productive, law-abiding, and competent members of society. Her findings were confirmed in a review of 12 long-term follow-up studies of foster children in North America by Maluccio and Fein (1985). Festinger (1983) and Zimmerman (1982) also found that being admitted to foster care younger and remaining longer was associated with better outcomes.…”
Section: Developmental Outcomes-follow-up Into Adult Lifementioning
confidence: 77%