Stacey Bouchet,
"Children with Incarcerated Parents: Many Stones Still Unturned"
(page 4 of 5)
Improving Academic Outcomes for Children with Incarcerated
Parents
One area of challenge for children that has not been adequately
addressed is the need for successful intervention models that target
academic success—arguably one of the most consistent negative outcomes
found in research on this population.
Satisfactory social and educational functioning correlates with
positive adult outcomes. Research, however, has found that school-age
children of incarcerated parents exhibit problems in school, including
poor grades and instances of aggression. Schools in high-poverty,
high-crime neighborhoods have more children with parents in prison, but
these schools are not necessarily doing more to help them. For example,
children are sometimes teased or ostracized by their classmates, or
pigeon-holed by teachers as a result of their parents' incarceration.
It is no wonder then that by eight years of age, these children have
already found that school is not an affirming place.[8]
Even when schools offer a safe environment for children, difficulties with stigma
and data collection prevent most schools from identifying and targeting
these children to receive additional support in school. There is
extreme need for better practices in the school setting to create a
sensitive atmosphere for children, caregivers, and parents.
Out-of-School Time Services
In the United States, there is only one youth opportunity program
that is available to all children and supported with public resources:
kindergarten through 12th grade schooling. School is the one place where
children—especially those who are poor—have access to the services they
need to become successful citizens, family members, and workers. This
is particularly true for children whose parent or parents are
incarcerated. Unfortunately, what we know about children with
incarcerated parents tells us that the vast majority of these youths
live in communities of concentrated poverty with schools that are
underperforming. Conditions in their neighborhoods often make even the
physical journey to school dangerous. Support and opportunities outside
of school are even scarcer for children in these impoverished
communities. Therefore, an investigation of promising out-of-school
models that can increase the educational outcomes of children with
incarcerated parents should also be considered a priority.
The Extraordinary Challenge of Incarcerated Fathers
The issue of maternal incarceration is significant and has received
substantial attention over the last decade because of the large growth
in this population. However, among incarcerated parents, 92% are
fathers with nearly half reporting that they lived with their children
before going to prison.[9]
Even when these fathers were not residing
with their children, they often contributed income, child care, and
social support to their families.[10]
These fathers are
disproportionately from lower income, segregated and disinvested
communities, where they will eventually return—too often without the
skills they need to become successful husbands, fathers, neighbors and
wage earners. Their ongoing struggles render already vulnerable
families and communities even further challenged.
Fathering while in prison is not impossible, but incarcerated men
face considerable obstacles. About six in ten incarcerated fathers have
some kind of monthly contact with their children, but the majority does
not receive visits from their children during their incarceration.
Because many men in prison report high rates of illegal drug use,
violence and mental illness prior to incarceration, many may not know
how to be good parents, yet now are willing to make the effort to
change. Prison-based parenting programs can help fill this gap.
However, these programs, while available in a growing number of
institutions, are still not widely offered in men's prisons. Only 11%
of fathers in state prisons report having participated in a parenting or
fatherhood class.[11]
Once released, former prisoners face the challenges of having little
money, a lack of social support, and barriers to housing and employment.
For many incarcerated and formerly incarcerated fathers, child support
debt is one of the most significant barriers they face.
In most states, when parents go to prison, their child support orders
are not automatically suspended or reduced. There are states where
incarceration is considered "voluntary unemployment," which does not
justify reduction. Debt mounts, often building to thousands of dollars
in arrears that low-wage ex-prisoners will likely never be able to pay
off. In Maryland, for example, 100% of the currently imprisoned
caseload and 97% of the formerly imprisoned obligors owed arrears. The
average amount owed by imprisoned obligors was $22,048 (with half owing
more than $15,931 in arrearages).[12]
Unless suspended or reduced
during incarceration, accumulated child support debt can interfere with
family relationships and undermine a parent's efforts to retain regular,
legal employment, which will be a source of ongoing child support
payments upon release from prison or jail.
Fathering and relationship education programs in prisons,
opportunities for enhanced child visitation, educational and job
readiness programs, substance abuse treatment, and child support debt
forgiveness are steps that should be considered to help support these
fathers in their parenting and familial roles.
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