Affiliation:
1. Clinical Psychology programme, University of Ottawa
2. Psychology and Director of the Centre for Research on Educational and Community Services, University of Ottawa
Abstract
The Looking After Children (LAC) approach is now widely used internationally in child welfare. The approach, which originated almost two decades ago, aims systematically to raise the standard of corporate parenting and improve the outcome of young people in out-of-home care. The Assessment and Action Record (AAR) from LAC is used to monitor young people's developmental progress on a year-to-year basis. Clearly, foster carers are central to the successful implementation of LAC and it is important that they perceive the AAR to be useful in carrying out their fostering duties. Previous research in the UK and Australia found that foster carers believed the record to be useful, especially if they were just getting to know the child or if the child had been in multiple placements. The study reported by Sarah Pantin and Robert Flynn draws on survey information provided by 93 foster carers in the province of Ontario, Canada. They found that foster carers who had received what they saw as higher-quality training rated the AAR as being more useful in their work. Interestingly, however, the amount of experience they had had in using the instrument was unrelated to their ratings of its usefulness. Overall, high-quality training emerged as a central feature of effective implementation. Specific recommendations were made in relation to LAC training curriculum requirements and stakeholder involvement.
Subject
Law,Sociology and Political Science,Social Psychology,Health (social science)