What is Foster Care Fortnight?
Foster Care Fortnight is a UK-wide awareness raising
campaign, co-ordinated by charity the Fostering Network.
This year, under the strapline fostering:
recognise the qualities you’ve got, the campaign
encourages people to realise that they may already share
the same qualities as those currently fostering, and that
these are the basis for becoming a great foster
carer.
During the two-week campaign, fostering services
around the UK will hold events to make people think about
fostering and highlight the urgent need for more foster
carers. The events are often imaginative, innovative and
fun and have previously included the burial of time
capsules, balloon launches, tree planting, floats in
local parades, face painting and coffee mornings. The one
thing the events always have in common is the opportunity
for people to meet existing foster carers and find out
more about fostering in their area.
For a selection of events and contact details for
fostering services, see www.couldyoufoster.org.uk/services/
What is foster care and how does it
differ from adoption?
Fostering is a way of offering children and young
people a home while their own parents are unable to look
after them. This is often a temporary arrangement, and
many fostered children return to their own families.
Children who cannot return home but still want to stay in
touch with their families often live with a long-term
foster carer.
Adoption, on the other hand, is where a new family is
provided for children who can no longer live with their
own family. An adoption order transfers the child's legal
relationship from their birth family to the new adoptive
family.
Adoption is the best option for a minority of
children, with around 4,000 children needing adoptive
families. However, the vast majority of children in care
do not need a new family, but rather to be given the
highest standard of care until they can return to their
own family or move on elsewhere.
What are the different types of
fostering?
Emergency fostering provides children
with a place to go immediately, no matter what hour of
the day or night, when social workers feel it is
essential to remove the child from a particular
situation. Longer-term plans will be considered for the
child during the next working day, or they will return
home as soon as the crisis is over.
Short break/respite fostering can
help keep families together by giving them a much-needed
breathing space. Foster carers look after a child maybe
one weekend a month or for the occasional week during
school holidays.
Short-term fostering allows foster
carers to look after a child for a few weeks or months.
There may be problems or illness in the family or the
child may have been harmed or abused in some way. The aim
of most short-term care is to get the child home to their
own family as soon as possible.
Long-term fostering allows a child to
grow up in a safe and supportive environment when they
cannot return to live at home, while keeping in touch
with their family if this is appropriate.
Why do children need fostering?
Foster carers look after children so that families
have a chance to sort out their problems. These can range
from a family member’s short-term illness to a parent’s
depression or drug or alcohol abuse. Some children may
have been abused or neglected. Social workers work with
families to help them sort out problems and make the home
a safe place for a child – with the aim that children and
parents can be reunited.
Why do we need to recruit more foster
carers?
Across the UK, over 50,000 children and young people
live with 43,000 foster families on any one day. Many
more move in and out of foster carers’ homes during the
year.
In order to provide these children with the highest
standard of care, each child should be able to live with
a foster carer carefully chosen to meet their specific
needs. The Fostering Network estimates that there is an
urgent need for over 10,000 more foster carers in the UK.
This shortage means that children are too often being
moved from home to home, are split up from their brothers
and sisters, and have to live a long way from their
family and friends. The more people who are approved as
foster carers, the more likely it is that a good match
can be found for a child in terms of location, culture,
lifestyle, language and interests, reducing this damaging
instability and disruption.
A wider pool of foster carers right across the UK is
needed to keep these children within their local area
wherever possible. We urgently need more people to become
foster carers. Foster Care Fortnight is the ideal time to
find out more about fostering.
Who can be a foster carer?
Almost anyone can apply to be a foster carer, but as
with any career, some people will be more suited to it
than others. Foster carers must be able to offer the
time, commitment, space and skills to care for children
separated from their own families. Key qualities include
being a great listener, having a good sense of humour,
being optimistic, having your feet firmly on the ground
and showing resilience.
In practical terms, there are no age limits, up or
down, and single people can foster as well as married or
cohabiting couples. Some foster carers have their own
children, others don’t. It doesn’t matter if foster
carers own or rent a house. People of all ethnic origins
are needed - children benefit from living with families
who share their own culture, language and religion.
Foster carers are approved to look after a specified
number, age and gender of children. Some people prefer
working with older children and teenagers, while others
are more skilled at looking after babies and
toddlers.