(1) Braley and Thompson, Inc., Charleston, West Virginia;(2) Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia;(3) School of Social Work, Virginia Commonwealth University, P.O. Box 842027, 23284-2017 Richmond, Virginia
Abstract:
We tested the notion that better foster care adjustment would be observed when the temperaments of mothers and fathers were matched with those of adolescent foster children. We hypothesized that families in which foster parents and foster children had high (easy) scores on subscales of the Revised Dimensions of Temperament Scale (DOTS-R) would also report higher family functioning and higher foster care adjustment than parents and children from families in which one or both family members had low (difficult) scores on these scales. The hypotheses were supported when the mothers and fathers family assessments were used but rejected when the observations of the case managers and adolescents were tested. Methodological and substantive explanations for the findings are discussed and recommendation for foster care practice and continuing research are provided.