What is Fostering?
Fostering means to nourish, to rear, to promote and to cherish. Fostering requires you to provide a nurturing and safe environment for someone else’s child or young person in your own home.
When families take on fostering they need to provide a safe, secure and stable environment, so that children and young people can recover from any trauma they have experienced and have the opportunities to reach their full potential.
There are a variety of reasons that some children and young people cannot remain with their families of origin, for example the child or young person is experiencing abuse, parents are drug or alcohol dependent, there is domestic violence within the family, family breakdown or relationship difficulties. It is rare for the children and young people themselves to be responsible for the difficulties, although they often feel they are to blame. It is usually the adults who have failed to provide good enough parenting. Fostering should give children and young people the opportunity to experience positive and rewarding family life which enables them to rebuild their trust in adults.
Fostering placements are needed for a range of timescales. Sometimes they can last for days, sometimes for months and sometimes for years. About 40% of children and young people return home to live with their own families within six months of living away. However, there are some children and young people that need longer term support. This can be provided through fostering, adoption, kinship placements, residential care or living independently.
Types of Fostering
- Bridging placements are required when a child needs to be prepared for another placement usually a long-term one for example adoption.
- Emergency - where children and young people need somewhere to stay at short notice.
- Family and friends or kinship fostering provide children and young people with places to live with people they already know.
- Long term - some children and young people cannot return to live with their families so need homes to stay in until they are old enough to live independently.
- Private fostering - where the parents make an arrangement for the child to stay with someone who is not a close relative and has no parental responsibilities for more than 27 days. Although this is a private arrangement there are special rules about how the child is looked after. The local authority must be told about the arrangements and undertake assessments to ensure the arrangements are safe and meet the child or young person’s needs.
- Remand fostering - in England and Wales children and young people can be ‘remanded’ by the court to the care of a local authority and placed with a specially trained foster carer. Scotland does not use remand fostering as young people tend to attend a children's hearing rather than go to court.
- Short breaks - where disabled children or children with special needs or behavioural difficulties enjoy a short stay on a pre-planned, regular basis with a new family, and their parents or usual Foster Carers have a short break for themselves.
- Short term fostering provides children and young people placements from a few weeks’ or months’ duration while plans are made for the child or young person’s future.