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My husband and I became certified over a year ago, but have not had a placement. We've had a dozen referrals, but none that were right for our family.
We got a referral recently for a 16 year old girl. We had originally planned on young children and had prepared for that, but, after much prayer decided to say yes to this referral. The girl is currently living in a different city, but for extenuating circumstances asked to be placed in our county. She has been living in a residential home due to truancy. The SW wasn't able to tell me much else about her expect that she is a good student, non-violent and doesn't have mental or physical disabilities.
Are we crazy for saying yes with so little info?
Also, my other main concern is our age. My husband just turned 30 and I am 29. I know she will think we are ancient, but I am the parent of a 2 and 4 year old.
We do have experience working with teens- just not parenting them...
any advice would be appreciated.
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I usually get a placement agreement for foster kids which gives me some of the information I am looking for.
You could ask the caseworker for a copy of the discharge report from the program. It should give you a summary of why she went there - what her issues were, what her successes were and what she is still working on.
On the age difference - you are young for a teen and it is likely that she will start out by trying to treat you like a "buddy" rather than a parent. My best advice is: it is much easier to start off strict and ease up as she earns it than to start off easy and then try to rein her in. You are good guy when you ease up and always a bad guy when you tighten the reins.
I would have a list of (reasonable) rules, chores and other expectations - with privileges to be earned and consequences for non-compliance.
Good luck.
I would not allow her to have a cell phone. If she needs to talk, let her do it on the house phone. At least until you are absolutely sure that she is not having contact with birth family, old boyfriends, internet friends, etc. Too much freedom is the number 1 problem with teens (foster, adopted, bio) and too much money is number 2.
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c.a
On the age difference - you are young for a teen and it is likely that she will start out by trying to treat you like a "buddy" rather than a parent. My best advice is: it is much easier to start off strict and ease up as she earns it than to start off easy and then try to rein her in. You are good guy when you ease up and always a bad guy when you tighten the reins.
I would have a list of (reasonable) rules, chores and other expectations - with privileges to be earned and consequences for non-compliance.
Good luck.
c.a
On the age difference - you are young for a teen and it is likely that she will start out by trying to treat you like a "buddy" rather than a parent. My best advice is: it is much easier to start off strict and ease up as she earns it than to start off easy and then try to rein her in. You are good guy when you ease up and always a bad guy when you tighten the reins.
I would have a list of (reasonable) rules, chores and other expectations - with privileges to be earned and consequences for non-compliance.
Good luck.
MamaS
I would not allow her to have a cell phone. If she needs to talk, let her do it on the house phone. At least until you are absolutely sure that she is not having contact with birth family, old boyfriends, internet friends, etc. Too much freedom is the number 1 problem with teens (foster, adopted, bio) and too much money is number 2.
ITA with Nevada. teens end up in RTC's because foster families want younger children.
As far as the teen: expect the teen to push as far as you'll allow. I had a 14 yo (in fc for 4 years and moved every year). My problem was I commute and don't get home until 7. they need structure even though they fight it. I didn't do allowance with him; I do it with the kids I now have. the younger ones get their grade. My 14 yo (different kid) will get his age. He has more chores and helps out more.
good luck!!
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