View MAPP Training Class Schedule
So . . . you think you already know how to be a parent? Despite the fact that no one knows it all, you have never parented children who have been abused and neglected. You were the oldest of several siblings growing up or you already have three children of your own. What this does prove is that you know that children come in many different shapes and sizes, as well as different personalities and can develop their own specific problems. This is why MAPP/GPS class is effective. Most of the children within "the system" have similar traits, situational difficulties, medical problems, and/or behavioral problems. With the knowledge you gain in MAPP/GPS class, you will be better prepared on how to deal with the traits you are not familiar with.
Your children, or the ones you feel you have gained your parenting experience from, have more than likely had at least one parental figure in their life that they could rely on, that fed them, that taught them right and wrong, and that guided them through the paths of life. Imagine for a moment that just ONE of those weren't available. No one to rely on. No food. No discipline. Would your children, or the ones you have been around for some time, even be the same child? Think about it.
An orientation, ten meetings, and a home study are all part of this training program designed to enable participants to develop knowledge, skills, and attitudes that will lead to successful foster and adoptive placements. All prospective foster and adoptive parents are required to participate in this training program in order to become licensed as foster parents and approved as adoptive parents.
MAPP/GPS class is a FUN, exciting experience that you will walk away feeling as if you learned something from every class. Don't get frustrated that you have to spend 30 hours in a classroom setting, but be glad there is a resource out there available to use and learn from.
            Welcome to the Group Preparation and Selection Program
            Acquaints leaders and participants with the Group Preparation and Selection Program
            and each other. Explanation of the process; discussion of foster care, adoption,
            and permanency planning; outline and discussion of the roles and responsibilities
            of foster parenting and adoptive parenting; communication skills building.
            Where MAPP Leads: A Foster Care & Adoption Experience
            Overview of a foster care and adoption experience from the perspectives of clients
            (children and parents), foster parents, adoptive parents, and child welfare workers.
            Demonstrates the stresses and losses which can lead to foster care placement or
            adoption; what happens if a foster home placement or adoption does not work out;
            how families are reunited; how children are moved into adoption; and how some youth
            in foster care move into independent living.
            Losses and Gains: The Need to be a Loss Expert
            Explores the impact of separation on the growth and development of children, and
            the impact of foster care and adoptive placement on the emotions and behaviors of
            children and parents. Examines personal losses (death, divorce, infertility, children
            leaving home) and how difficult life experiences affect success as adoptive parents
            or foster parents. Emphasizes the partnership roles of foster parents, adoptive
            parents, and social workers in turning separation losses into gains.
            Helping Children with Attachments
            Explores the subject of attachment and child development. Focuses on how attachments
            are formed and the special needs of children in foster care and adoption (especially
            in the areas of building self-concept and appropriate behavior). Discusses the partnership
            roles of foster parents, adoptive parents, and child welfare workers in helping
            children form new attachments.
            Helping Children Learn to Manage Their Behaviors
            Discusses techniques for managing behavior, with an emphasis on alternatives to
            physical punishment. Topics include special issues in discipline for children who
            have been physically or sexually abused or neglected. Techniques to be discussed
            include being a "behavior detective," reinforcement, time out, mutual problem solving,
            structuring and setting limits, negotiating, and contracting.
            Helping Children with Birth Family Connections
            Examines the importance of helping children in care maintain and build upon their
            identity, self-concept, and connections. Considers issues such as how children's
            cultures and ethnic backgrounds help shape their identity; the connections children
            risk losing when they enter care; and why visits and contacts with birth families
            and previous foster families are important.
            Gains and Losses: Helping Children Leave Foster Care
            Discusses family reunification as the primary case planning goal as well as alternatives
            like foster care, adoption, and independent living. Examines disruption and its
            impact on children, families, and agency staff. This meeting also focuses on the
            partnership role of child welfare workers, foster parents, and adoptive parents
            in helping children move home, into an adoptive home or into independent living.
            Understanding the Impact of Fostering or Adopting
            In the previous meetings, we discussed and "felt" what foster care and what adoption
            are all about. We learned about separation and attachment, how to build and maintain
            relationships with children and how to support them in working out the emotions
            they have for the important people in their lives. We've devoted a lot of time to
            the roles of both the foster parents and the adoptive parents, and the special way
            they will improve the lives of many children and families. But what will be the
            impact of all this effort on the foster families and adoptive families? How will
            this experience affect their marriage, children, relatives, friends, job, and income?
            In Meeting 8, we find out!
            Perspectives in Adoptive and Foster Parenting
            This meeting is open to all members of prospective foster and adoptive families,
            especially children, grandparents, close friends—anyone who will play a major role
            in the foster family or adoptive family. This meeting features guest foster families
            and adoptive families. The guests will talk about their personal experiences in
            fostering and adopting. Some of the topics include: impact on marriage and family,
            visiting parents, discipline, searching, helping children with family reunification,
            and making adoptions work. Other panel members may be attorneys, social workers,
            and birth parents.
            Endings and Beginnings
            The important tasks of this meeting will be to assess group members' strengths and
            needs as foster parents or adoptive parents. There also will be some time to say
            good-bye ... the ending. As the preparation/mutual selection process is coming to
            an end, so begins the transition into becoming a foster family or adoptive family
            ... the beginning.
        
                For additional information, contact
                Foster Parent Recruiter - Maranda Sales
                336-703-CHILD or 336-703-3708
                salesmw@forsyth.cc
                All classes are held virtually due to COVID-19
            
Final ERAP Application Deadline is June 15, 2022