Methodist Childrens Home CPA
Foster care enables families to open their hearts and homes to children who cannot live with their parents due to family circumstances. Foster families can make a positive, lifelong impact on children as they help them grow physically, spiritually, emotionally, and intellectually. Foster care provides a temporary living arrangement – typically ranging from 6 to 18 months – until the parents can resume parenting. Children in care range from birth through 17 years of age. Very few babies or children have special needs, such as medication or counseling.
Foster families are licensed through Methodist Children’s Home, approved by the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (TDFPS), and accredited by the Council on Accreditation (COA).
The foster care program at MCH is served by staff members who carefully plan for the child’s care, monitor progress and adjustment to the foster home setting, support the foster family through frequent telephone calls and visits, and prepare for the child’s eventual return to the home or alternate permanent placement.
Foster care through Methodist Children’s Home is unique because most parents or legal guardians place children and youth voluntarily. MCH also accepts children under the conservatorship of TDFPS. MCH offers a per diem reimbursement for boarding care and daycare for foster parents who work out of the home, along with routine medical and dental care for the foster children.
Fill out the Foster Care Inquiry below to get the conversation started!
Services and information
- Traditional Foster Care
- Specialized / Therapeutic Care
- Emergency Foster Care
- Respite Foster Care
- Adoption
Requirements to become a foster parent
Adults who are new to the fostering process sometimes feel overwhelmed and wonder if they will have support on their journey. Your child-placing agency is the first resource. Social services caseworkers provide aspiring foster parents with various types of support and connections. These include free educational training programs, helplines, and support groups.
It is important that foster parents build their individual support network, too. Connecting with other foster families with more experience is an excellent place to begin. Texas groups offer foster parent meetups; you can search online for the closest one.
The Texas Foster Family Association provides state training, a regional directory of support services, a summer training conference, and more. Membership benefits include getting access to foster care professionals and learning more about ways to become better caregivers. Children of TFFA members can also get assistance through the Scholarship Fund.
Austin Angels is another support organization that strives to assist foster parents and Texas foster children. They offer care packages and gifts for foster children and their caregivers, mentorship options, and education, among other resources. Foster children and teens can learn valuable skills that help prepare them for independent living, as well.
Ratings and Reviews
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Nov 05, 2020
Good work environment. Doing the construction on living spaces
Aug 13, 2020
I went to the home in dec of 1965 and lived there until 1974 it is a wonderful Christian organization we had excellent home parents and they really cared about us we were blessed and given the best of everything good food good homes and schools
The reason we had to go there my mother died when I was 4 and we had no one to care for us
We were taught how to work and have faith I was never mistreated once
I love that place and the people who are saying bad things I'm sure were never live there
Aug 10, 2020
Beautiful campus. We drive through. I'm not sure what they do there but the sure have nice facilities
Feb 23, 2020
I came to MCH in 2003 and stayed to 2006. I was in The Tom Mitchell unit witch is a structured unit them I worked the program to get to basic unit and I began to work . This place helped me to become the mother and woman I am today thank you.
Jan 14, 2020
Brother graduated