Please note: Translations are handled by an external website and are not endorsed by Peterborough City Council.

Your journey into fostering

If you've decided that fostering could be for you, there are a number of steps that need to be taken. We aim to take you through the process in approximately six months, following pre approval training, called "Skills to foster".

You will be visited by a social worker who will have initial discussions with you about foster care. They'll give you details of the assessment process. You will be asked to fill in an application form about yourself and other members of your household. This form gives us permission to carry out criminal records bureau and other checks.  We need to make sure that you've not committed any offences that automatically disqualify you from fostering. You'll be asked for proof of your identity (like a passport, birth or marriage certificate) and will ask for you to have a health check to show you don't have any major health problems.

You will receive an invitation to attend the mandatory pre-approval training, where you'll learn more about what's involved in fostering. This is also a chance to meet other people who are going through the process, and talk to experienced foster carers. If you are successful on the course, you will be allocated a social worker who will carry out your personal assessment. They will explain the skills and qualities that foster carers need. They will also discuss how you can demonstrate your skills through practical examples of activities you're already involved in. The social worker will conduct an in depth assessment which also looks at your life, family, values, skills and childhood experiences. This assessment will cover a range of subjects relating to the needs of children who require fostering.

We will take up your personal and employer references. We will ask your permission to contact ex partners and adult children. The reasons for this will be explained to you at the initial visit. All the information gathered by the social worker is put into a report outlining your skills, your future training needs and areas where perhaps you need more help. You'll see the social workers report and you can make your own comments in writing. he social worker then presents the report to the fostering panel. You will be invited to the panel and there is an expectation that you will attend.

The panel will make a recommendation to the agency decision-maker whether or not to approve you as a foster carer and the number, age and gender of children you can foster. The Agency Decision maker will then review the papers and the recommendations, advised by panel, and give their final decision regarding approval within 2 weeks of the panel date. If you are not approved your social worker will discuss the reasons with you and we will write to you. You will be able to put forward your own views and appeal the decision.  Once you're approved you'll be given further information about training opportunities by a social worker who will support you as a foster carer. Although within the first year you will be expected to undertake the Induction to Foster Care, which is a national programme.

A child or young person is placed with you. Their age and the length of their stay depend on the type of fostering you're approved for. our progress and development as a foster carer will be reviewed each year. Your approval is also reviewed when there's significant change in your circumstances. If we decide that fostering is not the way forward for you, we will always explain our reasons behind the decision. You have a right to appeal against the decisions we make.