There was a chat thread about a Times piece on Adoption Activity Days - here
As I said on that thread, I DO have some concerns about activity days. Based off my own children's opinions and personalities, but also off speaking to American adoptive parents who went to activity days.
I am aware of the benefits.
But equally I am concerned for the children, especially the older ones. My DD1, if she had been at an adoption party aged 9/10, would absolutely have known what was going on. At the very least, she would have picked up on the atmosphere - the prospective parents would almost certainly be giving off nervous/slightly stressed vibes she would have reacted to.
The article quoted on the chat thread includes a quote from a SW, I went to Massachusetts to study how they did it before we started here. An 11-year-old boy asked me if I could adopt him, and I said I couldn’t. I later saw him chatting with a family who did adopt him. He was very determined
When talking online to the American parents, this came up quite a bit. The kids aged about 7+ knew what was going on, and they started being negatively affected by it, especially when they felt rejected. Most of the kids went "parent shopping" as the adopters termed it. What that 11 year old boy was doing. The kids realised they had to act a certain way to entice the prospective parents to come talk to them and play with them. No being upset or angry, be charming, smile, have a few sentences ready about yourself, maybe even ask the parents outright whether they'd like to adopt you?
That makes me feel really sad and a bit sick. It's a terrible position to put a child in.
So I think they need to be very careful about having older kids there. Which seems counterproductive, because I want more older children to be found homes and apparently these parties are pretty successful with that
I'm not sure what the answer is. But I'm wary of anything which will negatively impact on the children