Artist Statement.

On the very first day at the beginning of the semester, our final projects were introduced. I’ll admit that I was a little intimidated. It was only the first class! It had only been in session for 30 minutes, and we were already talking about a finale for the next sixteen weeks of work. Talk about putting on the pressure.

Despite my intimidation, I started thinking about what I wanted to accomplish for the final project. Through observing and listening to other classmates, as well as insight about the foster care system through Kids Matter, Inc., I decided that I wanted to focus on stereotypes. At this time, I had not narrowed down my topic by what sort of stereotypes I wanted to deal with; I had just decided that stereotypes was a subject that interested me enough to stick with for the entire semester.

I think my impulse to explore the idea of stereotypes and its relation to the foster care system came from my own subjective thoughts about foster care youth. Initially, I think I had it in my mind when I found out that I was going to be working with a foster care program that I was going to be working with a bunch of rowdy, troublemakers. It seemed that I already had a predisposition about foster care, and the people who were placed into foster care. However, the more I started to dig into my thought process, and the research I had found, my ideas really changed. I started to wonder why I initially related trouble and foster care together. I wanted to explore where my predispositions came from; why I had negative thoughts about foster care without really having a basis or justification for my subjectivity. It takes a lot of courage for an artist to admit a flawed opinion. And it takes even more courage to actually explore the real answer to the problem.

When I think about where my predisposition about foster care youth came from, television and movies pop into my head. I have seen numerous movies where foster care youth have been portrayed in a negative light, whether it is troublemakers, bullies, or even drug addicts. I’ve never had a personal experience with foster care, and I have never known anyone in foster care, so I was really basing my own opinions on the closest thing I could relate to: the media. The media has sensationalized the view of many foster care adolescents establishing stereotypes amongst the general public. Even news related material that tend to focus more on negative stories related to foster care youth versus positive stories contribute to the overwhelming amount of stereotypes that these youth face daily.

This project has really helped me as an artist in understanding where the ideas that are already in my head came from. I found a problem with my way of thinking, and through researching and addressing the issue appropriately, I corrected my though process. Reading the perspective of current or former foster care youth that have been victims of these stereotypes helped me understand how my previous opinions were unjustifiable. The only thing I achieved by automatically linking bad behaviors with foster care is just another stereotype that affects these teens.

4.29.2009

Questionnaire Responses!

Well, I must have ESP or super human powers because the day after I posted about the questionnaire, I received a response!

Even though I was looking for a more in depth discussion regarding the questions I have listed in the previous post, these answers still provide somewhat of an insight to how stereotypes affect foster care youth.

The response was from a female foster care youth who has been in the foster care system for three years. The youth states that the reason why she was placed into foster care was because her parents were abusive. Even though the youth has only been in the foster care system for three years, she has been in three group homes, and eventually placed into a foster home. The youth states that being in foster care has affected her by making her feel unwanted. She admits that she has acted out because of these repressed feelings. She continues to say that she feels that staff members, teachers, and her friend's parents treat her differently because she is in foster care. "Everyone thinks that you are bad kid, or that you are psycho because of where you live." When asked what kind of stereotypes are associated with foster care children and adolescents, she replies that people think foster care children have done something wrong or that is is their fault the reason why they have been placed into foster care. She says that these stereotypes make her feel like crap.

I think this questionnaire really gets to the core of what I wanted to accomplish with my project. At first, I began exploring what types of stereotypes are ubiquitous amongst society. I researched different articles that described the most common stereotypes. I interviewed people within the community and learned what their perspective of these stereotypes were. However, getting to understand how these stereotypes affect the youth that are being targeted, and what their perspective is the ultimate goal of the blog. I think the Youtube videos really achieve that as well.
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