What are the different types of placement
There are a number of different types of foster care placement offered by FCA. We encourage FCA foster carers to be flexible and adaptive to differing circumstances and be willing to take more than one type of fostering placement.
Foster care placement types vary in duration and can therefore last for days, months or years, depending upon the circumstances and needs of the child.
Click on each type of fostering placement to learn more
This type of fostering involves caring for children or young people who need somewhere safe to stay immediately, usually for a few nights. This can often happen at very short notice.
Short-term foster carers provide a temporary place to stay until the child can return home to their own family, move into a longer-term fostering placement, or an adoptive family is found. This can last for a few weeks or months, sometimes longer.
When a child cannot return home, decisions have to be made to find a permanent family for them. For some children, such as those who are older or in regular contact with their birth family, long term foster care may be preferred to adoption.
Children and young people in long term foster care continue to be a legal part of their own family (even if they have only a limited amount of contact with them), but live with long term foster carers until they reach adulthood and they are ready to live independently.
Respite involves children living with foster carers having short stays with another foster family to give their family/main carers a break. At FCA, this usually involves looking after a child or young person who is placed with FCA foster carers for a weekend, one week or two weeks.
Parent and Child placements are provided to a mother and/or father and their child/ren, where foster carers can provide support and guidance to the parent(s) and help them develop parenting skills.
Additional training is provided for foster carers providing Parent and Child placements. Some Parent and Child carers work as part of a professional team to undertake a formal assessment of the parenting ability of the mother and/or father.
Download our Parent and Child Placement Leaflet
Remand foster carers look after young people who are remanded by the Courts into public care. (In Scotland, young people may be placed in foster care as an alternative to secure accommodation). These placements are usually short term and require the carer to work closely with the youth justice/offending teams.
A Sanctuary Seeking child or young person is someone who is under 18 years of age, separated from parents/family, applying for asylum.
These children and young people have often travelled long distances (from countries such as Afghanistan and Iran), may not speak English and can be frightened and confused.
Foster carers are needed in most areas in the UK to provide a safe, stable and supportive home for Sanctuary Seeking children and young people. While there is a need for carers who reflect the culture and religious background of the children and young people, we recognise that often this is not possible. FCA will therefore provide specific training to all carers to assist with meeting the cultural, religious and identity needs of this group of children and young people, in addition to comprehensive information and the support of a dedicated Supervising Social Worker.
There are many disabled children and young people in the UK who need a fostering family. This can include children with physical disabilities, learning disabilities, sensory impairments or a combination of these.
Foster carers can provide regular short breaks for disabled children and young people. This provides vital support to both the child and their family.
Do you already have children in your household? Have you considered how fostering may affect birth children?
Content © Foster Care Associates 2010






