Diverse Fostering

Diverse Fostering Diverse Fostering supports carers who care for vulnerable children and is rated Outstanding by Ofsted

All set up for our day at Stone Carnival Week. Come down and see us. Bring the sun! Although dry at moment.
06/06/2026

All set up for our day at Stone Carnival Week. Come down and see us. Bring the sun! Although dry at moment.

When foster carers believe in the children in their care, those children learn to believe in themselves. Read this inspi...
02/06/2026

When foster carers believe in the children in their care, those children learn to believe in themselves. Read this inspiring story of how Lucy became a Barrister.

Lawyers Who Care ⚖️

Lucy Barnes is a Barrister who has made it her mission to open up the profession to other care experienced people.

When she was younger, Lucy found it hard to imagine a future. Dealing with so much turmoil around her, school simply wasn’t a priority.

However, things started to change when she entered care age 13 and she met someone who truly believed in her – her foster dad. His deep-rooted belief in her gave Lucy hope that she could succeed. 💖

Once she qualified, Lucy set up Lawyers Who Care with fellow barrister Kate Aubrey-Johnson, breaking down barriers to the legal profession for young people in the care system.

Lucy sat down with Foster Care magazine to talk about her journey into law and the unwavering belief from her foster dad that helped get her to where she is today.

Read more ➡️ https://bit.ly/3OEcZty

01/06/2026
31/05/2026

Once fostering becomes part of your world, you start noticing it everywhere in stories, news, TV, and everyday conversations. It changes what stands out emotionally.

This episode of Ambulance sounds like one of the more human moments the series does really well: a routine emergency call suddenly becoming something deeply personal because the paramedic could genuinely relate to the foster carer’s experience caring for a child with disabilities. Those moments can hit differently when you foster yourself, because you know the reality behind the scenes — the exhaustion, attachment, advocacy, and constant adapting.

Programmes like this also quietly show how many different professionals and families intersect around vulnerable children: carers, paramedics, schools, social workers, hospitals, respite services. Once you’re in fostering, you realise how connected all those worlds are.

https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1bS6h8ryMe/

27/05/2026

The Diverse Fostering World Cup Draw took place on 15th May - you will all know your teams. Best of luck ⚽🏆

When I was a foster carer, I heard “Oh, I could never do that, I’d get too attached” more times than I can count. My res...
27/05/2026

When I was a foster carer, I heard “Oh, I could never do that, I’d get too attached” more times than I can count. My response was usually that children need us to care enough to form those attachments, even knowing it may hurt when the time comes to let go.

For however long a child is with you, they deserve to feel safe, valued and genuinely loved. The difficult part is part of the role — because meaningful care and connection always leave an impact.

https://www.facebook.com/share/1DkEG2Ts6X/

Outstanding Isn’t a Rating — It’s a CultureIn fostering, ‘Outstanding’ should never begin with inspection frameworks.On ...
19/05/2026

Outstanding Isn’t a Rating — It’s a Culture

In fostering, ‘Outstanding’ should never begin with inspection frameworks.
On 4th October 2011, I attended a small talk delivered by a person who had left care. The talk was titled ‘Authenticity in care’. The trainer said four very powerful statements.

• Are you real?
• Do you trust me?
• Do you care for me?
• When it’s real it rubs off.

Yesterday this got me thinking that children experience quality long before inspectors read a report.

They experience it in the consistency of adults around them. In whether carers feel supported during difficult moments. In how people speak to them. In whether they feel emotionally safe, listened to, and valued.

Inspection outcomes matter. Regulations matter. Compliance matters, however, truly outstanding fostering is cultural before it is operational.

The focus should be on services that genuinely care and create environments where children can thrive and feel loved. The difference is rarely found in paperwork alone. It is found in culture; something I see every day in the amazing foster carers I have the privilege of working alongside.

A strong fostering culture cannot be created overnight before an inspection, nor is it built through impressive policies or feel-good training sessions alone. It develops steadily over time through genuine relationships, consistency, reflective care practice, and the way carers respond when challenges and pressures arise.
Fostering is difficult at times and children entering care often arrive carrying trauma, grief, loss, rejection, instability, and fear. Foster carers open their homes and hearts to children who may understandably struggle to trust adults. In those moments, culture becomes visible.

• It becomes visible in whether foster carers feel able to ask for help without judgement.
• It becomes visible in whether staff support one another.
• It becomes visible in whether children shape practice.
• It becomes visible in whether fostering services remain child-centred even under pressure.
Some of the most meaningful examples of quality in fostering are rarely the things that appear in formal reports.
• It is the person who answers the phone after hours because a carer is struggling.
• It is the child who begins sleeping through the night because they finally feel safe.
• It is the foster carer who continues showing patience and warmth after a difficult day.
• It is the team that works together when challenges arise and that goes the extra mile.

These moments are not accidental.

Too often within social care, there can be pressure to become inspection-led. Services can unintentionally focus on presenting well externally while overlooking the everyday experiences of children, carers, and staff.

Children do not experience fostering through policies, They experience it through relationships. They notice whether adults are calm and emotionally available and whether promises are kept, they notice whether they are spoken about with dignity and respect, and whether they feel like a placement or like part of a family.

You are all doing an amazing job, and all those little things that may not be recognised by certificates, inspections, or reports are often the very things that change a child’s life the most.

So remember this:
• When you are real, children see it.
When you make promises, make them sparingly but keep them faithfully.
• What you do every day matters more than you may ever realise.
• Outstanding is not simply a judgement.
• Outstanding is the culture you create through care, consistency, compassion, and authenticity, and children recognise it long before anyone else does.

Andrew

Address

Diverse Fostering, 1 Commerce Street
Stoke-on-Trent
ST31NW

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