Saturday, March 10, 2012

Can't we all just get along?


Importance of Positive Relationship between Foster Parents and Case Workers

I find it a little bit satisfying when research supports things that seem like common sense.  I realize that often, this is the case, but it’s still nice.  Rodger, Cumming and Leschied’s research found that most foster parents are “motivated by wanting to be loving parents to children and saving children from harm.”  This isn’t surprising, but is very encouraging.  Parents go into foster care because of “altruistic and internal motivations to foster” (Rodger, Cumming, Leschied, 2006).  

 However, many parents who begin to foster find that the challenge is overwhelming.  A helpful thing from this research is the identification of three aspects that increased foster parents’ satisfaction: teamwork, communication, and confidence in relation to both the child welfare agency and its professionals. 

I found this surprising.  But then, I haven’t fostered a child.  As I continued reading it made a lot of sense though.  It helped to think of Brofenbrenner’s ecological model. 


This model represents the idea that our development is influenced by several different “systems” at several different levels.  There’s the self, or the child, in the middle (our gender, age, genes, etc), next is our most immediate relationships, and it spreads to broad influences such as laws, customs, and social class.  Every level has an impact on our, or the child’s, development.




Within the context of the ecological model, it’s not surprising that one of the most frustrating things for foster parents is, “not being recognized as part of the professional team or having expertise, as well as not being heard as an advocate for the child”. (Rodger, Cumming, Leschied, 2006).   Child welfare agencies become very prominent in a foster child’s life, but if it’s too prominent it may make parenting more difficult for the foster parent.  A welfare service would normally be a part of the exosystem, but with foster care it often comes into the mesosystem- which may step on parents’ toes.

This article shows how important it is for foster parents to not only prepare to open their homes to the children they’re caring for, but to also prepare to work closely with the foster agency and learn to communicate well so that both parties see each other as helpful resources.

Michelle

Susan Rodger, Anne Cummings, Alan W. Leschied, Who is caring for our most vulnerable children?: The motivation to foster in child welfare, Child Abuse & Neglect, Volume 30, Issue 10, October 2006, Pages 1129-1142, ISSN 0145-2134, 10.1016/j.chiabu.2006.04.005. (http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0145213406002080)

6 comments:

  1. I think it is necessary to include foster parents in the cycle of childcare. They need to be treated with respect if they are to be expected to respect what they are doing for foster children. I worked in a nursery for foster parents while they went to parenting classes, and the foster parents seemed sincere in their desire to provide good care for the children.

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  2. I loved the quote that you mentioned how foster parents are frustrated that no one recognizes them as a professional or knowing what they are doing. I haven't thought about foster parents like that either so thanks for opening my eyes to how they actually are. I think if more people realized that foster parents would be held at a higher respect.

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  3. Foster parents do wonderful things for children and should be recognized for their efforts I am glad you brought attention to their concerns.

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  4. I think this was a great subject to write about. My parents have been foster parents for a few disabled children and I know that it is difficult and that it is a full time job. Foster parents are great people who do need to be recognized for their efforts.

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    1. That's really neat that your parents opened their home. Were you still at home? The foster parent, foster child relationship is interesting, but I'd like to see more research on the relationship between foster children and the parent's biological children.

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