Imagine you and your family go out one day to choose a new puppy.
You walk up to the pen and see numerous little nuggets running around and looking longingly into your eyes, begging you to take them home.
Now imagine this same situation but bigger. Imagine 50 puppies in a room filled with toys and snacks. And now imagine those puppies are children.
And the people standing around them? Imagine they are not potential owners but rather – imagine that they are the kids’ potential parents.
Welcome to the world of Adoption Activity Days or ‘adoption parties’ as they’re more commonly known in the United Kingdom.
Adoption parties are part of a scheme introduced two years ago by the British Association for Adoption and Fostering. They’re based on a similar initiative in the US and are used as a way to encourage adoptive parents to think differently when choosing the kind of child they’re planning to adopt.
The reality of these choices however are that many children – particularly boys, disabled children, children from ethnic minorities and groups of siblings – who never find a permanent home and end up being raised in a long-term foster homes.
It is hoped that by going to adoption parties, parents might meet a child and automatically connect with them – and that’s something that’s not necessarily possible if they’re only seeing one of the 4000 children who need homes “on paper”.