Skip to main content
search

Types of foster care

There are more ways to Foster than you may think. Find a placement that works for you.

Foster Care Icon

Foster Carers play a vital role in our community, providing safe and nurturing homes to children and young people,  from infancy to 18 years of age, who cannot live with their family.

With over 33 years’ experience in providing homes and therapeutic care for traumatised children, young people, and babies, Lighthouse Foundation is leading the way in foster care. Our approach focuses on trauma-informed care, attachment theory, and contemporary psychoanalytic principles to support young people’s growth and healing.

Types Of Foster Care:

Lighthouse Foundation provides four different types of foster care, ensuring that the differing  needs of children and young people are met. Our program creates a community whereby carers are guided using the Lighthouse Model of Care to care for children in a trauma – informed and therapeutic way.  

The length of time caring for a child or young person depends on the type of foster care that you are assessed as suitable for, and also what your personal preference is.

Short Term

1 NIGHT UP TO 6 MONTHS:

Short Term care is for children and young people who require care ranging from overnight up to about six months.  Short Term Care provides the opportunity to provide a safe and nurturing environment until children can be reunified with their parents, or extended family.

Long Term

6 MONTHS ONWARDS:

Long Term Care is care provided for 6 months or greater, and can continue until a child or young person can return to their parents, live with family or until adulthood. Sometimes, long term care can transition to permanent care whereby their permanent carers receive formal guardianship.

Respite Care

1-7 days:

Respite care is short-term and/or intermittent care provided for children and young people living with full-time foster, kinship carers or parents. Respite can be on weekends or for one week for example during school holidays. This type of care supports building meaningful connections with children, by providing safe and reliable relationships.  Respite Carers are an important part of a child and caregivers support network.

Emergency

1 night up to 2 weeks:

Emergency care is for children and young people who require immediate care due to concerns for their safety. This care is required urgently, and there is usually very little notice before a child or young person is placed with a carer. This care may be for a couple of nights while a short or long term carer is identified, or in some cases the child will remain and lead to short term care.  Emergency carers must be prepared to be contacted at any time, offering essential care and meeting the needs of children who may arrive with little to no belongings.

Hub Home

At the heart of our program is the Hub Home, a space where therapeutic support and care are available for foster children, carers, and their families. The Hub Home also facilitates regular social activities, creating a ‘village’ of extended support to help children form positive, healthy attachments with adults who care deeply about their safety and wellbeing.

We believe that this strong sense of community enhances stability in placements, continuity in care, and provides foster carers with the tangible support they need to thrive.

Express your interest in becoming a foster carer in Melbourne

Become a foster carer with Lighthouse Foundation and help give vulnerable children a safe and happy home.

Talk to one of our friendly team members on:

Foster care

Enquire about our foster care program today

Lighthouse is in urgent need of foster carers who are willing to help better the lives of vulnerable children in the northern and southern Melbourne regions.

We are looking for people from all walks of life, who are willing to open their hearts and their homes to children who urgently need care.

We recognise that the fostering journey is not always easy, but at Lighthouse we ensure that we are with you every step of the way. We care for you, so you can care for them.

Enquire here

Our foster carers’ stories

James' story

“They helped me with group and one to one sessions with a clinician. I really felt supported.”

James had previous experience in other states before coming to Lighthouse, his work meant that he needed to move to Victoria so when he made the move, he contacted us about becoming a Carer.

After his training and accreditation, he met Terry and 8-year-old boy and started a short term placement. Because of Terry’s experiences before coming into care, he often responded in ways to express his trauma. This could at times be challenging and difficult for James. Terry would often be bouncing around, unable to stay still. When he found things tough, he tried to break things, throw them and call James names.
To support James, Lighthouse Therapeutic Carers went into the home 3 nights per week. They role-modelled ways that James could respond to Terry using play, curiosity, acceptance and empathy. Sometimes our Therapeutic Carers looked after Terry so James could have a break.

Terry would also stay with us in our Hub Home every second weekend and engaged in the Lighthouse community through activities and events where he was able to meet and spend some time with other young people in care. Terry started to feel he had a place he belonged.
James said that ‘I found some days really tough but was able to contact one of the team at Lighthouse to talk through how I was feeling, and they helped me by taking part in group reflective spaces and one to one sessions with a clinician. I really felt supported.’

James was committed to showing Terry that despite the hard times, he was there for him and was not going to leave. This commitment and patience showed Terry that he could trust James and he started to feel safety in their relationship, and slowly started to realise he did not need to push and test whether James would always be there for him.

Clare's story

“The training I received was helpful in understanding how to respond to children in a trauma informed way, learning patience is key.”

Clare has been caring for children in foster care for the past 10 years. As a single woman, she sought out Lighthouse after researching local agencies and enquired with us highlighting an interest in our Model of Care and support available for Foster Carers. Clare was new to the foster care system in Victoria, so she was asked to complete a new assessment.

Clare said that she was really impressed with Lighthouse’s professionalism, throughout the whole process since putting in her application.  ‘I really felt Lighthouse was clear and approachable’ Our care team provided timeframes and answered all her questions and Clare told our team ‘I was very impressed with Lighthouse’s therapeutic approaches to caring; I felt a sense of a real team approach in the program.  The training I received clarified how to respond to children in a trauma informed way, learning patience is key, which really helped reflect on previous experiences and how I can continue to grow and learn.’

Leonie's story

“For me, fostering was never a question of if, but a question of when.”

It all began when I was given a foster care pamphlet 20 years ago and since then I’ve never looked back. I was a young mum of two, who were under the age of two, and I felt an overwhelming sense of gratitude – we had everything we could ever need. I wanted to give back on a personal level and provide a sense of giving that would be a guiding value to our family.

My biological children knew no different – they had foster siblings that would stay for varying lengths of time and they knew that how we helped each would need to be different. They learned compassion and patience and that love is simply love. Our family adopted a very special boy, Alex, at the age of two and he holds equal amounts of space in our hearts, as we hold for each other.

Reflecting back on some of the foster placements we took on at places other than Lighthouse, we weren’t provided with much detail prior and there was an absence of trauma-informed training and ongoing psychological support. That is what sets Lighthouse apart.

Had we been better prepared to deal with each child’s individual needs and experiences and had foster family matches been considered with the same rigor as Lighthouse, I think we could have been more effective in helping to heal and grow these children like we did with Alex. Had our program offered the lifelong extended family network that Lighthouse does, we’d know that each foster child we cared for would always have someone walking alongside them, during both the highs and lows of their life.

I do believe that foster children in Lighthouse’s programs are far more likely to rebuild and maintain relationships with their birth families, which is the ultimate goal of fostering.

Lighthouse recognises those who so deeply want to care for these vulnerable children and young people in the way they deserve, and they build training and support around them so they can fulfil that goal.
 
No other fostering program leans in like Lighthouse does. I truly believe what they provide makes the most impactful difference for everyone involved – all members of foster families, birth families, the community and society more broadly.

Close Menu