10. _______________ The foster children who are the hardest to find homes for consist of kids
older than ten, kids with special needs, sibling groups, and African Americans. Success
depends on close coordination of a professional team that includes two full-time private
investigators who track down dozens of members of a child’s biological family. On a
practical level, relatives are more likely than strangers to go through with adoption, and
having contact with family is critical to a child’s identity. As visitors from around the
country are eager to observe and replicate its method, Extreme Recruitment might pave the
way to revolutionize the foster-care system in America.
(A) Before allowing strangers to adopt foster children, the government should make sure
they do not have family members who can take care of them.
(B) There are nearly half a million American children in foster care, but they would age out
of the foster-care system when they turn eighteen.
(C) The Internet, especially public databases like publicrecordsnow.com and virtualgumshoe.com,
has made Extreme Recruitment’s family-matching job easier.
(D) An innovative program in St. Louis, Missouri, is making big strides in matching hard-toplace
kids with adoptive families in a highly effective way.