Yes, foster kids can remain in foster care while attending college, depending on the policies of the state and the specific circumstances of the individual. Many states allow foster youth to stay in care until they turn 21, especially if they are pursuing higher education. Additionally, programs may offer support services for college students in foster care to help them transition successfully into adulthood. It's essential for foster youth to communicate with their caseworkers to understand their options and resources available to them.
Not against your will, however, there are some provisions that allow children who want to stay in foster care until they graduate from high school to be able to stay under the support of the state.
Yes, if care workers sense the child is being treated unfairly or is unhappy. They will be routinely checked. Some foster parents are placed under surveillance if they are suspected is wrong.
Foster parents typically receive their reimbursement checks for foster children around the beginning of each month. The exact timing can vary by state or agency, but payments are often issued shortly after the start of the month for the previous month's care. It's important for foster parents to stay in communication with their agency to understand specific payment schedules and any potential delays.
I was a stay-at-home mom.
If the child is being abused or parents die for example. Also if a child is being put up for adoption they can stay in foster care until they have found parents.
I think this depends on if the foster parents would take your friend back or not. If your friend moved out of the friends house she would have to by law move in with another foster family because she isn't a legal adult. I think that is the way it goes unless your friend got emancipated from the foster care system and can live on her own.
In most cases you age out of the system when you are 18 years old. But some children have to stay in the states care until they are 21 for certain reasons.
They can be picked up by the authorities and returned home. If they don't stay, they can send them to foster care.
If the Foster organization places him in another house that is in the school district then yes he should. If he stays in the same area but moves school districts, he might be able to get pupil placed, and stay in that school.
Their children stay with relatives or any family related to them, but if they don't have any relatives, then they go into the foster system where they get to stay with foster parents who take care of them until they're 18 years old, and they can move out then and get their own place, and support themselves.
They are taken for their own safety, for how long will depend on individual circumstances.
The children lose their mother. If the mother attempted suicide, fails, and goes go jail, then the kids would go to the father. If the father is unavailable, or unwilling to take the kids, the children would go to their grandparents, then to Uncle or aunts, god parents and lastly foster care. If the mother attempted suicide, but fails, and does not go to jail, the first option is that the kids stay with her.