Home Provider General Foster Care
Foster Care PDF Print E-mail
Written by Jenny Wanderscheid   

 

Foster Care

 

By Vanessa Rasmussen, © 2004, All rights reserved.
Website:
http://www.startingadaycarecenter.com

 

 

Foster care homes are important for children that need a safe place to live. These homes are only provided temporarily and usually in an urgent situation. Children are often placed in a foster home because they have been removed from their family. Foster parents are then crucial to the welfare of the child, and often work closely with teachers, attorneys, social workers, doctors, and other agency officials. Foster parents are not there to replace the child's family; however, foster children have crucial needs for which a foster parent must provide. These needs are not just food and shelter, but rather, the needs include support, encouragement, reassurance, self-esteem, self-worth, and most importantly, love.

Over 500,000 children in the U.S. currently reside in some form of foster care. Placements in foster care have dramatically increased over the past 10 years. Nearly half of today's population of foster kids is under the age of ten. Physical abuse, neglect, abandonment, drug problems, alcohol problems, and sexual abuse are just some of the reasons that result in a child being removed from his or her home. Making decisions about the future for a child in foster care is called "permanency planning." Options include: returning the child to his/her birth parents; termination of parental rights (a formal legal procedure) to be followed, hopefully, by adoption; or long-term care with foster parents or relatives.

Social service agencies nationwide are experiencing a shortage of foster and adoptive parents willing to tackle the complexities of providing safe, loving homes to neglected and abused children. Working with an emotionally fractured child can be challenging to any seasoned social worker or therapist, even those with vast years of experience and solid training. However, the daunting and complex task of mending a maltreated child often lies in the hands of foster and adoptive parents who take such children into their families.

Some problems that a foster parent needs to be able to handle include setting discipline in the home, dealing with bed-wetting, lying, aggressiveness and rebellion. Foster parents need to act as any other parents, but with the added challenge of dealing with a child that has a troubled background and an already inflated fear of rejection. They need to provide a sense of belonging, acceptance, and love; however, these needs are usually met by the result of a small success following an enduring struggle with many early failures. And many times it is the case that after all this effort is put into a relationship with a foster child, the foster parent must be able to let go if the child needs to be relocated or placed back with his or her biological family.

Adoption is often a consideration for foster parents. In fact, about two-thirds of the children placed in foster care are later adopted by their foster parents.

If you are interested in becoming a foster or adoptive parent, please contact your State's adoption or foster care specialist. They will be more than happy to discuss with you the process of training and approval of your home.

 

Copyright 2001, 2004. All rights reserved. Any reproduction of this article in whole or in part without written or verbal permission is strictly prohibited. For information about reprinting this article, contact the copyright owner: Vanessa Rasmussen, Ph.D, Starting a Day Care Center, http://www.startingadaycarecenter.com.






kidline

Dear Reader:  You can help us make this section even better!

All of our articles and ideas have come from our imagination and from reader submissions.  Please use this form to contact us if you have content you would like to add to this website. Make sure to add your comments at the bottom of the article!  And don't forget to visit us on our child care forums for friendship, support and learning!

Webmasters and Authors:

We will gladly include a link back to your site or book in exchange for sharing your content.  Just contact us!


(0 Votes) Quote this article on your site

To create link towards this article on your website,
copy and paste the text below in your page.




Preview :

Foster Care
Tuesday, 06 January 2009
Foster Care By Vanessa Rasmussen, © 2004, All rights reserved. Website: http://www.startingadaycarecenter.com Foster...

Powered by QuoteThis © 2008
Last Updated on Tuesday, 06 January 2009 12:12
 

Upcoming Holidays


If you like to plan ahead, this is the section for you!
We've got year round fun on tap every day of the year!
Independence Day
Grandparents Day
Columbus Day
Halloween
Thanksgiving
 


Share This Page!









 

Get $10.00 Off
Must use coupon code
STMMMS79744

 

 

Get $10.00 Off
Must use coupon code
STMMMS79744

Twitter




CF Link Partners

Your child can make his or her own birthday invitations with templates or uploaded artwork.
Moms Buy Children's Shoes on DHgate.com

Easter I Coloring

Easter II Coloring

More St. Pat's

Passover Coloring

© Copyright 1996 - 2012
ChildFun is a trademark of ChildFun, Inc.
All Graphics on this site are copyright protected
© ChildFun, Inc. and © Original Country Clipart
ChildFun, Inc., PO Box 1173, Mankato, MN 56002