Homelessness: The Devastating Effects Of Homeless Youth

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Homeless, is someone who is without a home, and therefore typically living on the streets.I choose this topic because I know some people who wear and are homeless with children and.I would like to know more about this topic. Homelessness can have devastating effects on youth. They include, lower academic achievement, greater emotional and behavioral challenges ,and poor physical and emotional health. The Mckinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act, Title X, Part C defines homelessness as “individuals who lack a fixed, regular and adequate nighttime residence.” The definition includes children and youth who are: Sharing the housing of other persons due to loss of housing, economic hardship, or a similar reason (sometimes referred to as doubled-up); …show more content…
According to some estimates, 3-6 months of education are lost with every move.Homeless children are more likely to perform more poorly in school, not going, repeat the same grade over and over often, or drop out.Moving for school to school can make a children stressful and, when they are not in stable home it, can make it more stressful Homeless children show that they have more problems in school than children with housing, more trouble learning to develop healthy relationships,in school and more difficulty staying on track in school.Families move from place to place because of the limit time they have to stay at shelter,and when they stay with family or friends sometime they get put out.That make the children have to change school or miss school if the parents have to take them to school or find a way for them to get there every day when they do not have a bus. Most of homeless children go to school and do not do nothing but, just to come and get away for what they call home but it is not home.According to Rafferty, Y “Homeless children score lower than their housed peers on achievement tests and are …show more content…
To make matters worse, new research has found that 1 in 4 of these kids face mental health issues.Drawing on data from CATCH, a Salvation Army-funded initiative that evaluates the mental health needs of children at shelters in North Carolina, the researchers were able to screen 328 children between the ages of 2 months and 6 years old. They noted impaired social-emotional functioning in 25 percent of the children—a rate two to three times higher than in kids in the general population—and found that school-age, homeless children (between 5 and 6 years old) performed well below average when it came to language and academic skills.”Children that do not have a stable home or somewhere to call home have behavioral problems in school.Maybe because they are not get no attention at home,so they act out so that someone can see them.Some homeless children give their only parent problems when that is the only person that care about them.By the time a homeless child is 8 year-old they have a mental health problem. Most homeless children under the age 5 developmental delays and 40% percent exhibit emotional and behavioral problems.”The symptoms that result from the stress of homelessness, can include anxiety, depression, extreme withdrawal, poor concentration or various forms of "acting out," such as tantrums.” Homeless children get sick faster than other