Can Foster Parents Choose the Age of Foster Kids?

Choosing the age of the children you wish to foster is one of many considerations to becoming a foster parent in Wisconsin. Most important is how a foster child will fit into your family. Although foster parents cannot pick specific children to care for, they can have an age preference. 

Foster parents can choose the age and gender of a child.

One of the first questions we ask prospective CCR foster parents is: Do you have an age range in mind? No right or wrong answer exists, but it is a great place to start our initial conversation. Knowing what age group interests you allows us to help you explore fostering and how it will fit with your family. Keep in mind the dynamics of your household, space, schedules, and whether other children are living in your home.

The greater your age range preference, the more opportunities for placing children in your home. It may be helpful to break down your preferences into the following groups.  

 

CCR is committed to finding the best home for each child and sibling group where healing can happen. Many factors go into deciding where a child will be placed. Our goal is to create successful outcomes for both foster parents and kids.

How are children placed in a foster home?

When a child or sibling group is referred to CCR, our team reviews available families for the best possible home. Considerations may include:

When a referral is a potential match for your home, Brian, our placement supervisor, calls to share what he knows about the children, including the history of abuse/neglect, behaviors, emotional health, and any previous foster home placements. A pre-placement visit allows the foster family to meet the children before committing to a placement. Typically, the kids will spend an overnight or weekend with the family and determine if they wish to care long-term for the children. A typical placement will last 12-24 months. If the family declines the placement, the search continues to find a suitable home where healing can happen.

 

A desire to foster younger kids may include sibling groups and older kids.

Below is a recent post from a foster parent support group on Facebook. The frustration is accurate; waiting can be difficult. Her question received many comments from foster parents across the country that are worth considering if you want to foster little kiddos. 

"Hoping you can help me out. We've been getting lots of calls for kids over age eight. The age group we prefer is newborn to age 6. I feel awful turning them down, but I'm just nervous about that age group. Should we stick with our preferred range or consider raising our age range? What have you done? Thanks"

We’ve had a couple of placements, both older than what we thought we wanted. The first one was seven, but he was more like a four-year-old in reality. It was non-stop and very challenging. We have a 12-year-old now, and although she has teenage feelings, she’s academically a fourth-grader and emotionally behind. She has a lot of childhood trauma. I never saw my family taking an older child but she is a great fit for our family. It might be wise to consider development and history instead of age.

We said eight and under, and we don't have room for siblings. We got one call in the first four months! It was for a six-year-old, and it fell through. We finally said we would go older; we have a 10-year-old boy now. He came with a lot of issues, but he is doing better every day he is with us. I’m so glad we said yes.

We currently have two sisters, ages 4 and 6, and they are great, but a 13-year-old girl we had with us last year was such a fantastic kid. Teens, in general, made me nervous before her. Maybe she was an exception, but she fit so well with us. 

We got a nine-year-old, and it was hard initially to get used to because our only bio is a four-year-old. We are five months in, and I love this girl so much. It looks like they may be terminating rights, so she may be here to stay!

We originally wanted 0-6, but we did respite for an 11-year-old girl, and she was the easiest of the five kids we have had since getting licensed. The littles are fun but have lots of trauma. Do what you think is best for your family.

When we got our foster care license, we said eight and under because we have an 8 and 5 yr old. They called us for a 10-year-old boy, asking if we could be open-minded (they were trying to get him back to Wisconsin). Four months later, he is still with us and thriving!!
My husband and I wanted foster kids under the age of four. The agency warned us we would be waiting. We waited so long and have not gotten any calls for that age. We finally got a call for a 9-year-old girl, she was here for 9 months. Now we have a 15-year-old girl and she has been a challenge but she is thriving here. Our 6-year old bio son loves her to pieces.
I got a teenager when my two kids were under five years old, and as awkward as it was at first, it was great! I will happily take a teenager again.

Girls in car

I wanted kids under age 10 because my kids are 6 and 9. After waiting for five months, I finally accepted my first full-time placement. She’s a 14-year-old. I was so nervous!! But I love her. She can be difficult, but we work through it. I am glad I opened up my age range, or I would have missed knowing her. 

Our age group was 3-10 (no diapers), and I thought I could never do older, but after having a few foster kids in elementary school (high maintenance), we said yes to a 15-year-old, and let me tell you, she is a fantastic kid. Yes, there is drama but she is so much fun and loving. The younger ones were exhausting!

My 4-year-old foster son is giving me a run for my money but he was worth waiting for 3 months to get the call. If that's the age range you really want. Be patient. .
Foster parents change their minds a lot!
Changing your mind as you travel through your foster parenting journey is okay. Sticking to your original thoughts is also OK, but that may mean being patient for a placement. The common theme in the comments to the woman's post was that all of the foster parents adjusted their age range. They all opened their hearts to something other than what they originally planned. Most expressed how they would have missed out if they had not changed their minds.
Hundreds of kids need homes.
No matter your age preference, hundreds of Wisconsin kids are waiting for a home. CCR receives approximately 60 referrals each month from counties across Wisconsin. We will always need more homes for all the kids. Please consider helping older kids. Our new foster parent advisor, Jane, has personal fostering experience and would love to talk with you, whatever your preference is. Contact us anytime!

Wisconsin Foster Parent Says Goodbye to Boy

Before I became a foster parent I didn't give much thought to saying goodbye to the foster children I would love and care for. Although it is the obvious, inevitable result of being a foster parent, it wasn't something I focused on. Unless you are able to adopt from foster care, which many foster parents in Wisconsin do, you will experience "saying goodbye". There is no preparing for it, although our foster agency tried. We talked about it during foster care training classes, but I couldn't have ever been prepared for the gut-wrenching bag of emotions. If only I had known, it would all be temporary. Very temporary!

Before I get into details, let me be clear that I did survive and so will you. I promise. The first hole in your heart will heal as will all the others. You will discover that your heart is big for a beautiful reason, and it might not be the reason you think. It took one boy to teach me what the reason was for me.

Being a foster parent and letting go of the kids I loved, changed me.

I truly believe that I am a better woman, wife, mom, daughter, and friend because of the experience of loving and letting go. Being vulnerable to the heartache of letting go of kids you love takes strength, resilience, and courage. It is through these vulnerabilities that we as foster parents are able to love our foster kids with no agenda, expecting nothing in return.

I guess I just accepted it as fact. The saying goodbye part that is. I knew the difficult day would come eventually with our first placement and the emotional roller coaster leading up to that day was difficult. Perhaps as foster parents, we bury ourselves in the loving, healing, and growth taking place. Maybe, we focus on the journey one day at a time to protect ourselves from the inevitable or maybe it is just instinctive to push it to the side until it happens. But it is going to happen.

Foster care brings an array of new experiences and emotions.

I had never lost a loved one or family member. I had several miscarriages but had not yet said a final goodbye to someone I truly loved. In hindsight, maybe my inexperience or naivety protected me from anticipating saying goodbye. The agency notified us, he would leave at the end of the month. I decided to offer mom and baby extra visits during the time remaining. I began to meet with her 2-3 times a week. Just the three of us, or sometimes my kids would come along, we met in public parks and fast-food restaurants, to help facilitate a smooth transition back home. I wanted her to know her son and I wanted him to know her too.

Court dates were set and our caseworker kept us informed of timelines. I will admit, my thoughts weren't always pleasant. It wasn't fair! The system was broken! He should not be going home! STOP, WAIT... Like so many things in life, the situation isn't always what you think AND you will never win a battle of love with negative thoughts like those.

Friends and family, even strangers told me:

"You will be okay."

"Look how much you helped him."

"You'll get another foster child to help." (yep, that one).

Until the day it happened to me and my family I could never have imagined the heartbreak. What was to come would be even more unimaginable. 

The judge ordered he be moved to the home of a relative.

Family members were approved to care for him and he would soon live with family and his mom, with supervision while with her son. The supervised living situation would last for at least 6 months until a judge determined it safe he be returned to mom permanently. Not knowing the family, we were nervous about the transition back home. Would he be afraid, confused, and would he wonder where we went?

My children skipped school the day he left and my husband took the day off work.

His bags were packed, he was wearing an orange shirt (his best color), and we took dozens of "last photos". Tears, hugs, and kisses were plentiful. Nearly a year had passed since he arrived. He came to us after a hospital stay. At just 5 months old, he had survived shaken baby syndrome. It was months before the Neurosurgeon would place him in the 15th percentile of shaken babies with a specific hematoma that survives without brain damage. He was a miracle.

I drove with him in the backseat, one last car ride together, the caseworker leading the way in her car ahead of me. I was sick to my stomach. The 30-minute drive felt like hours. My eyes welled with tears as I tried to keep my emotions together as best I could, knowing that this indeed was a happy, joyous day for him, his mother, and their entire family.

I remember walking up the steps of the split-level home, holding him tightly I wondered; Will they hate me? Will they ask me to leave immediately? The smell of home cooking was thick in the air. Relatives were seated around the room, watching with curiosity, and friendly hellos were exchanged. I understood not one word spoken that day but I clearly remember feeling the anticipation, nervousness, and pure joy and excitement that filled the house. Their baby boy was HOME.

She made eye contact and shook my hand then I handed her the son she had lost nearly a year ago. 

My throat tightened and a hole immediately formed in my heart. I tried to imagine what her heart was feeling. She had been separated from her son for 2/3 of his life. His injuries would be proven in court to be a terrible accident but the guilt she wore was palpable. I wanted desperately for her to feel the love I had for her son. I wanted each of them to believe that we loved him in her absence because that is why we chose to become foster parents. We gave him all we could so he could prosper later in her loving care.

Nobody told me, so I am telling you now: Goodbye is not always forever.

After nearly two hours in the home that day, I left alone. I expressed myself as best as I could, through the translation of the caseworker, that we loved him without agenda. I wished her the best life and hugged her goodbye. Our journey had ended. I kissed him on the top of the head as he stood at the coffee table, I could not breathe.

As I made my way down the stairs to the front door, I glanced to my right and was at eye level with him. Holding his little juice cup he looked at me as if to say:

It's okay mommy, you can go now. 

I closed the door and held my breath as I walked to the car. Once inside I let out the cry I had been holding all day. I looked up through the windshield to see him in the window, hands on the glass. His mom was at his side encouraging him to wave.

The next several days were very difficult.  Sadness filled my heart and sudden bouts of tears would come unexpectedly. In my mind, I knew he was where he belonged, with his family, but my heart would need some time. There was a void in the house and I wasn't sure I could ever put my family through that heartache again. AND THEN...

Two weeks later we received a call that would change everything!

It was his uncle asking if we would like to visit the baby. Elated for the opportunity, we scheduled a date. We had no idea that cold Saturday afternoon, that the year-long journey we thought had ended was to be resurrected. The trajectory of a new journey would be fierce and more life-changing than the previous one. The visit would be the first of dozens of family gatherings and celebrations during which we would laugh our way through language barriers and cultural differences. Trust was earned, love grew, and our families expanded.

Much has happened over the last 14 years that shall remain our personal story and journey. Those who know my family well and have been witness to our journey say it is a movie script in the making. We shrug and say it's just how it was meant to be. We were put together for reasons much bigger than we will ever understand.

Our lives continue to be enriched by this amazing young man, his devoted, loving mother, and their entire extended family. My husband remains a loyal father figure, I am trusted and loved as Grandma (a young one), and my children are regarded as his older siblings. We love him like our own and cannot imagine life without him. He excels in school and is a very respectful young man with the enormous promise of a very bright future.

By now you may be wondering about that heartache. Had things not turned out as they did, would we have fostered again? Would I put my family through it? ABSOLUTELY.

We went on to foster nearly 20 children over a 7+ year period. Our hearts were broken a few more times but more importantly, we helped many kids heal and grow. We experienced joyous occasions with adoptive parents, celebrated birth parents reunification, and watched our own children blossom through all the experiences.

About the holes in the heart I spoke of earlier, well, I truly believe those holes were meant to hold all the wonderful memories each child gave us.

This author wishes to be anonymous and CCR is grateful that we can share her story. 

GET YOUR FOSTER LICENSE IN 100 DAYS! Homes for kids 10-18 are desperately needed.