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A Journalist’s Guide to AdoptionA Journalist Guide to Adoption: Dear Journalist: Adoption is now deeply embedded into the fabric of family life. Even so, Americans and those who encounter adoption in their work still harbor doubts about it, clinging to the stigma of a bygone era when adoption was the subject of secrecy and shame. A Journalist’s Guide to Adoption presents basic familiarity with numerous adoption issues so that you can provide more accurate coverage. The guide will: Thank you, Press Release: GROUPS SEEK ACCURATE ADOPTION REPORTING “Through their word choices, even well-meaning journalists can and have inadvertently conveyed the misconception that adoptive families are somehow less genuine and permanent, and that people who were adopted and their role in a family remain somehow different,” said the letter to journalists sent during November National Adoption Month. “The reality is that adoption is as valid a way of joining a family as birth. A stylebook entry on adoption would help journalists use language that conveys the fact that adoptive families are just like any other, both in law and in loving relationships.” Those who signed the letter felt the effort to convince journalists to use appropriate language is important because at least six million people in the U.S. were adopted into their families and the number of Americans touched by adoption exceeds 100 million. Currently, language used often conveys antiquated and inaccurate attitudes about adoption that affect children and society. The letter is being sent to the editor of the Associated Press Stylebook, used by journalists throughout the country as their basic guide to writing style, and to the editors of stylebooks used by a wide range of other publications. The signers hope the letter will convince the stylebook editors to add an entry on adoption in stylebooks, which would quickly result in journalists nationwide using more appropriate language when reporting about adoption. A copy of the suggested entry is attached. The nationwide Accurate Adoption Reporting campaign has already received widespread attention, including a feature in The Los Angeles Times, one of the nation’s largest and most-influential newspapers. The article was reprinted in newspapers throughout the United States. The letter has also generated significant support from prominent groups and individuals within the adoption community. Among the groups and individuals signing are the Institute for Adoption Information, the Center for Adoption Support & Education, Families With Children from China, several authors and publishers of adoption books, adoption agencies and social workers, celebrity adoptive parents such as actor Joe Spano and CBS Senior Vice President Mitch Semel, and dozens of individual adoptive parents. The letter to editors said journalists need to describe adoption accurately and objectively, but news and feature stories have often employed inaccurate, even sensationalized, language about adoption. For example, many obituaries of Maureen Reagan mentioned that her brother Michael was adopted. The fact that he was adopted 50 years ago was as relevant as information that someone else was born prematurely or by C-section, the letter said. Coverage of the Tom Cruise-Nicole Kidman divorce typically described the couple as having “two adopted children.” Again, the fact they were adopted is irrelevant. A spokesman for Cruise and Kidman said this kind of language is insulting. Accurate Adoption Language Suggested Adoption Stylebook * An adopted person’s parents should be referred to simply as father, mother, or parents. The man and woman who shared in the child’s conception can be referred to as the birth-, or genetic or biological parents (not “real” or “natural” parents). * Writers should avoid terms such as “abandoned” or “given up.” It is usually inaccurate to refer to children available for adoption as “orphans.” Often, their birthparents are alive. Nor should children be referred to as “unwanted.” It is better to say that birthparents placed the child for adoption, made an adoption plan, or transferred parental rights. * The reasons that people adopt are rarely relevant. To suggest or say that parents “couldn’t have a baby of their own” is inaccurate. Adoption is not second best. Children who join families through adoption are their parents “own” by law and by love. * Stories should not portray adoptive parents as unusually selfless or saintly. In most cases, families adopt because they want to be parents and are no more saintly or selfless than other parents. For more information: Mike Feazel, Accurate Adoption Reporting, 2115 Ward Court, NW, Dept MF, Washington, DC 20037. Related Tags: adoption, adoptive language, adopt, adopting Tags: adoption educationRelated posts1 Trackbacks/Pingbacks
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