Every young person in Kentucky deserves the opportunity to reach their full potential, and education is key to long-term success. Students with foster care experience bring unique strengths and perspectives to our classrooms; they also face systemic hurdles that can make the climb toward graduation more difficult. Frequent moves and significant trauma can contribute to poorer educational outcomes and leave many without the skills needed to thrive later in life.

In Kentucky, youth experience an average of three placements per removal episode, and these disruptions can make it difficult to stay on track academically. At the same time, these experiences can continue to impact learning and engagement into adulthood, where mental health challenges and limited supports can make it difficult to access and succeed in postsecondary education, even in a state like Kentucky that offers a Tuition Waiver. The goal of this report is to identify these barriers and their impacts to highlight what is possible and build a more supportive educational system for our most vulnerable students.

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Attendance

Youth in foster care experience significantly higher rates of chronic absenteeism and homelessness than their peers. Disruptions in placement and schooling can lead to missed days, gaps in enrollment, and inconsistent attendance. These challenges make it harder for students to keep pace with instruction and increase the likelihood that they fall behind or are required to repeat a grade.

Chronic Absenteeism Among K-12 Students in Kentucky

Students in foster care have experienced homelessness at 3X the rate of their peers. Source: School Report Card, Kentcky Dept of Education

Disruptions in placement and schooling can lead to missed days, gaps in enrollment, and inconsistent attendance.

Chronic Absenteeism Among K-12 Students in Kentucky

Students in foster care have experienced homelessness at 3X the rate of their peers. Source: School Report Card, Kentcky Dept of Education

Disruptions in placement and schooling can lead to missed days, gaps in enrollment, and inconsistent attendance.

Education Outcomes

Students in foster care perform below their peers on academic assessments in foundational subjects, such as reading, math, and on-demand writing. These gaps appear early and widen over time, indicating that many students are not meeting grade-level expectations, in part due to the instability and trauma these students experience.

School Assessment Data – Elementary, Middle, and High School

Students Proficient in Subject Area by Grade Levels

Students in foster care fall behind their peers early in reading, math, and writing. These gaps grow over time, often driven by instability and trauma that disrupt learning.

School Assessment Data – Elementary, Middle, and High School

Students Proficient in Subject Area by Grade Levels

Students in foster care fall behind their peers early in reading, math, and writing. These gaps grow over time, often driven by instability and trauma that disrupt learning.

Students Proficient in Select Subject Area by DCBS Region

Students Proficient in Select Subject Area by DCBS Region

8th Graders Proficient or Distinguished in Reading

11th Graders Proficient or Distinguished in Writing

Graduation, College & Career Readiness

Due in part to challenges with attendance and foundational skills, students in foster care graduate at lower rates than their peers and are less likely to demonstrate college and career readiness. They are less likely to transition to postsecondary education after graduation and less likely to complete career and technical education pathways while in high school, reducing opportunities to build workforce-ready skills and earn industry-recognized credentials.

Graduation rate for students in foster care. 81% of students in foster care who graduated on time within the 2023-2024 school year. 93% of all students in Kentucky who graduated on time within the 2023-2024 school year. Source: High School Feedback report

Career and Technical Education Enrollment and Completion

Graduation rate for students in foster care. 81% of students in foster care who graduated on time within the 2023-2024 school year. 93% of all students in Kentucky who graduated on time within the 2023-2024 school year. Source: High School Feedback report

Career and Technical Education Enrollment and Completion

Postsecondary Readiness

Students in foster care are more than 30% less likely to experience postsecondary readiness than their peers

Students who are Postsecondary Ready

Postsecondary Readiness

Students in foster care are more than 30% less likely to experience postsecondary readiness than their peers.

Students who are Postsecondary Ready

ACT Score Average

Average Junior Year ACT Score

ACT Score Average

Average Junior Year ACT Score

Tuition Waiver

Kentucky’s Tuition Waiver for Foster and Adopted Children allows youth currently in foster care, who have aged out, or who were adopted from care to attend Kentucky’s community and technical colleges and public universities without paying tuition or mandatory fees. The utilization of this waiver has steadily increased over the past decade; however, graduation rates at both institution types remain low, even among those using the waiver.

Enrollment at an In-State College One Year Post Graduation

First Year College GPA of In-state, Kentucky Students

Enrollment at an In-State College One Year Post Graduation

First Year College GPA of In-state, Kentucky Students

Enrollment and Graduation rate of first-time, full-time students utilizing tuition waivers by year students started university

Enrollment and Graduation rate of first-time, full-time students utilizing tuition waivers by year students started university

Innovative Programs

With the right supports in place, young people with foster care experience can excel in school, thrive in adulthood, and accomplish their dreams. Across Kentucky, programs are helping young people with foster care experience access the academic and concrete supports they need to succeed in school and prepare for adulthood.

  • KCTCS Foster Youth Success Coaches help current and former foster youth navigate the college process from enrollment to graduation.
  • DCBS’s Earn & Learn allows eligible youth to earn wages while pursuing a short-term KCTCS certificate in a high-demand field.
  • The Foster Care Council offers an individualized tutoring program that connects foster children who are testing below grade level with a certified teacher for three hours per week at the child’s current placement.
  • Family Scholar House supports young people who have a foster care experience in pursuing education and self-sufficiency through coaching, housing supports, financial assistance, career pathways, and regular check-ins.

With the right supports in place, young people with foster care experience can excel in school, thrive in adulthood, and accomplish their dreams. Across Kentucky, programs are helping young people with foster care experience access the academic and concrete supports they need to succeed in school and prepare for adulthood.

  • KCTCS Foster Youth Success Coaches help current and former foster youth navigate the college process from enrollment to graduation.
  • DCBS’s Earn & Learn allows eligible youth to earn wages while pursuing a short-term KCTCS certificate in a high-demand field.
  • The Foster Care Council offers an individualized tutoring program that connects foster children who are testing below grade level with a certified teacher for three hours per week at the child’s current placement.
  • Family Scholar House supports young people who have a foster care experience in pursuing education and self-sufficiency through coaching, housing supports, financial assistance, career pathways, and regular check-ins.

Policy Solutions

Effective policy must be rooted in the expertise of those who have navigated the system firsthand. Centering the lived experiences of foster youth ensures that these solutions address real-world barriers and foster true educational equity.

Increase Educational Stability

Protect Progress in K-12 Education

Support Completion of Postsecondary Education

  • Track and report the number of school changes for youth in care, the status of school enrollment, and the steps taken to maintain their school of origin.
  • Standardize and enforce clear, consistent processes for transportation of youth in foster care to their school of origin, including how transportation is arranged, communicated, and reimbursed.
  • Strengthen foster care points of contact at the district level and identify school-level contacts with clearly defined roles, responsibilities, and coordination expectations.
  • Require full and partial credit transfer when students in foster care change schools due to placement changes so they are not placed behind or into lower-level coursework.
  • Require individualized academic planning with targeted supports, such as tutoring and credit recovery, to keep students on track for graduation and postsecondary readiness.
  • Strengthen and standardize postsecondary transition planning for youth aging out of care, including support with FAFSA, admissions, and enrollment, and ensure coordination across available funding and support programs.
  • Designate a campus point of contact to support students utilizing the Tuition Waiver, including clearly defined roles and responsibilities for coordinating financial aid, academic support, and student services.
  • Expand and ensure consistent access to supports beyond the Tuition Waiver and Chafee Educational Training Vouchers (ETV), including housing, meal plans, books, and campus-based services that support student success.

Increase Educational Stability

  • Track and report the number of school changes for youth in care, the status of school enrollment, and the steps taken to maintain their school of origin.
  • Standardize and enforce clear, consistent processes for transportation of youth in foster care to their school of origin, including how transportation is arranged, communicated, and reimbursed.
  • Strengthen foster care points of contact at the district level and identify school-level contacts with clearly defined roles, responsibilities, and coordination expectations.

Protect Progress in K-12 Education

  • Require full and partial credit transfer when students in foster care change schools due to placement changes so they are not placed behind or into lower-level coursework.
  • Require individualized academic planning with targeted supports, such as tutoring and credit recovery, to keep students on track for graduation and postsecondary readiness.

Support Completion of Postsecondary Education

  • Strengthen and standardize postsecondary transition planning for youth aging out of care, including support with FAFSA, admissions, and enrollment, and ensure coordination across available funding and support programs.
  • Designate a campus point of contact to support students utilizing the Tuition Waiver, including clearly defined roles and responsibilities for coordinating financial aid, academic support, and student services.
  • Expand and ensure consistent access to supports beyond the Tuition Waiver and Chafee Educational Training Vouchers (ETV), including housing, meal plans, books, and campus-based services that support student success.

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Data Sources & Definitions

School Types 

This report includes some data broken down by different types of public schools. Those schools are defined as:

  • A1 schools are schools under the administrative control of a principal or head teacher and are eligible to establish a school-based decision-making council. An A1 school is not a program operated by, or as a part of, another school.
  • A5 schools are district-operated alternative education programs with no definable attendance boundaries designed to remediate academic performance, improve behavior, or provide an enhanced learning experience
  • All other school types encompass A2, A3, A4, A6, A7, and A8 schools. A2 schools are district-operated career and technical education centers. A3 schools are district-operated, special education programs. A4 schools are district-operated, state-funded preschool programs. A6 schools are Kentucky Educational Collaborative for State Agency Children (KECSAC) funded program serving state agency children, including children in residential foster care programs. A7 schools are miscellaneous schools set up for tracking home/hospital and summer school. A8 schools are district-operated, full-time online and remote learning programs.


Attendance 

Chronic Absenteeism is the percentage of students who is present 90% or less of full-time equivalency.

SOURCE: SY2024-2025 School Report Card, Kentucky Department of Education. The most recent data was accessed in April 2026.

Homelessness is defined as individuals who lack a fixed, regular and adequate nighttime residence. The term includes children and youths 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”); living in motels, hotels, trailer parks, or camping grounds due to the lack of alternative adequate accommodations; living in emergency or transitional shelters; or abandoned in hospitals; Children and youths who have a primary nighttime residence that is a public or private place not designed for, or ordinarily used as, a regular sleeping accommodation for human beings; Children and youths who are living in cars, parks, public spaces, abandoned buildings, substandard housing, bus or train stations, or similar settings; and Migratory children who qualify as homeless because they are living in the circumstances described above.

SOURCE: SY2024-2025 School Report Card, Kentucky Department of Education. The most recent data was accessed in April 2026.


Education Outcomes 

Elementary, Middle, and High School Assessment Data is the percentage of public school students in their respective grade category who earned a score of “proficient” or “distinguished” on a given subject on the Kentucky Alternate Assessment test.

SOURCE: SY2024-2025 School Report Card, Kentucky Department of Education. The most recent data was accessed in April 2026.

Eleventh Graders Proficient in Writing is the percentage of public school eleventh graders who earned a score of “proficient” or “distinguished” on the Kentucky Alternate Assessment writing test.

SOURCE: Kentucky Center for Statistics, SY2024-2025. The most recent data was pulled in April 2026.

Eighth Graders Proficient in Reading is the percentage of public school eighth graders who earned a score of “proficient” or “distinguished” on the Kentucky Alternate Assessment reading test.

SOURCE: Kentucky Center for Statistics, SY2024-2025. The most recent data was pulled in April 2026.

Graduation, College, & Career Readiness

High School Graduation Rate is the percentage of students who were indicated as graduates from Kentucky public high schools. These totals do not include graduates from career high schools.

SOURCE: SY2022-2023 High School Feedback Report, Kentucky Center for Statistics. Published July 2025. The most recent data was accessed in March 2026.

Career & Technical Education Enrollment and Completion is the percentage of students enrolled in a Kentucky Department of Education (KDE) approved career and technical education (CTE) dual credit class. A student must receive at least one high school credit for coursework taken within the KDE-approved secondary CTE program area to be identified as career-ready and considered complete.

SOURCE: Kentucky Center for Statistics, SY2022-2023. The most recent data was pulled in April 2026.

Post-Secondary Readiness is the attainment of the necessary knowledge, skills and dispositions to successfully transition to the next level of his or her education career. To demonstrate postsecondary readiness, high school students must earn a high school diploma or be classified as a grade 12 non-graduate AND meet one type of readiness (Academic or Career).

SOURCE: SY2022-2023 High School Feedback Report, Kentucky Center for Statistics. Published July 2025. The most recent data was accessed in March 2026.

Average ACT Score is the mean ACT score from the junior year statewide ACT administration for these public high school graduates.

SOURCE: SY2022-2023 High School Feedback Report, Kentucky Center for Statistics. Published July 2025. The most recent data was accessed in March 2026.


Tuition Waiver

In-state College Going Rate is the percentage of public high school graduates who enrolled at an in-state college or university at any point during the academic year immediately following high school graduation. Graduates enrolling at more than one postsecondary institution are counted only once.

SOURCE: Kentucky Center for Statistics, SY2022-2023. The most recent data was pulled in April 2026.

First Year College GPA is the mean GPA for all public high school graduates who attended an in-state public college or university during the academic year immediately following high school graduation. Developmental courses are not included in the calculation of GPAs.

SOURCE: SY2022-2023 High School Feedback Report, Kentucky Center for Statistics. Published July 2025. The most recent data was accessed in March 2026.

Graduation Rate of First-time, Full-time Students utilizing Tuition Waivers is the percentage of first-time, full-time students utilizing a Foster and Adopted Student Tuition Waiver in a cohort who graduated within three years of starting a Kentucky Community and Technical College (KCTCS) program or six years of starting a public university program.  The year on the graph represents the year that a student started college.

SOURCE: Department for Community-Based Services, Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services. March 2026.