Skip to content
  • Training portal
  • Careers
  • About
  • Contact us
  • Our work
    • Annual events
      • The Family Services Symposium
      • The OPEN Symposium
      • ResiROCKS
      • Early Years Forum
      • Anti-Poverty Week
      • Media Awards
    • Working with families
      • Adolescents who use violence in the home (AVITH)
    • Workforce capacity
      • Family Preservation Reunification Response (FPRR)
      • Outcomes, Practice and Evidence Network (OPEN)
      • Residential Care Learning and Development Strategy (RCLDS)
      • Switch to Social Work
    • Lived experience
      • Lived Experience Design Project
    • Education
      • Early Start, Bright Future
      • Education in Out-of-Home Care
      • Raising Expectations
    • Out-of-home care
      • Fostering Connections
      • Carer Kafe
  • How we work
    • Policy, research and submissions
    • Collaborations and partnerships
    • Network forums
      • Kinship Care Network
      • Children, Young People and Families Philanthropic Funders Network
  • Learning and development
    • Training and events calendar
    • Course catalogue
    • Custom training solutions
    • Nationally accredited programs
    • Residential Care Learning and Development Strategy (RCLDS)
    • MARAM Training
  • News
    • Media
    • Our newsletters
  • Resource hub
  • Become a member
  • Training portal
  • Careers
  • About
  • Contact us

Home   /   News   /   Pathways to Caring

Pathways to Caring

10 Sep 2013

The Centre for Excellence in Child and Family Welfare is pleased to launch the Pathways to Caring report, which analyses the choices and decision making of people enquiring about becoming foster carers.

Within Victoria there is strong community interest in foster care, with more than 2000 households annually enquiring about becoming foster carers. Despite this interest, we have a significant carer shortage and just 10% of enquirers proceed along the journey to become accredited foster carers.

Following the completion of the Foster Care Communication and Recruitment Strategy in 2012, the Centre conducted research with enquirers to the Foster Care Hotline and Foster a Brighter Future website to explore the issues impacting their pathways to becoming carers.

The responses showed that investment in a targeted and centralised recruitment and communications strategy can have a substantial impact on community interest – particularly in segments of the community that don’t traditionally think of themselves as being eligible to become foster carers.

Most importantly, the research considers the concerns, community attitudes and information needs that must be addressed for us to convert enquirers into foster carers and establish foster care as a viable and sustainable option for children unable to live at home.

The report of this survey is the third in a series that the Centre has published reviewing the provision of foster care within Victoria.

Foster Care In Context: An Evaluation of the Foster Care Communication and Recruitment Strategy by Verso Consulting for the Centre for Excellence in Child and Family Welfare.

The Circle Program: An Evaluation of the Therapeutic Approach to Foster Care by La Trobe University, for the Centre for Excellence in Child and Family Welfare.

Pathways to Caring: Strategic Engagement of Potential Foster Carers.

 

Related articles

Postcards for a good life for Tasmania children

Content

Postcards for a good life for Tasmania children

31 Oct 2024

Tasmania’s Children’s Commissioner is asking children and young people across Tasmania what is needed to make...
Launch of Tasmanian Youth Justice Reform Taskforce Action Plan

Content

Launch of Tasmanian Youth Justice Reform Taskforce Action Plan

30 Oct 2024

An action plan to progress youth justice reform over the next 12 months has been launched...
What we heard – the Connecting Tasmanian Communities Tour

Content

What we heard – the Connecting Tasmanian Communities Tour

28 Oct 2024

The Centre has concluded our Connecting Tasmanian Communities Tour, covering 1,620 km across the state, where...

Last updated: 10 Sep 2013

  • (03) 9614 1577
  • 50 Market Street, Melbourne, VIC 3000
  • About us
  • How we work
  • Our work
  • Resource hub
  • Learning and development
  • News
  • Our Newsletters
  • Careers
  • Contact us
  • Child Safe Policy
  • Accessibility Policy
  • Privacy Statement
  • Terms and Conditions

The Centre for Excellence in Child and Family Welfare Tas Vic acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of the lands on which we live and work, the palawa/pakana of lutruwita and the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nations. We pay our respects to Elders past and present. We honour their enduring strength and aspirations for the future of their young people, communities and lands.

We appreciate and celebrate diversity in all its forms. We believe diversity of all kinds makes our teams, services and organisation stronger and more effective.