Well we are now officially in the midst of our home-study. For some funny reason the home-study has always made me feel a bit nervous but after meeting our social worker (sw) Monday morning I feel completely at ease. He is super personable and what was supposed to be an hour long meeting was more like an hour long conversation. We talked about our mutual love of the San Francisco Bay area as well as the all important paperwork we need to complete as part of our home-study.Once we got down to business our sw gave us a large 3-ring binder containing more paperwork (shocker...) but also a ton of helpful information. Before I explain what this process will look like for us let me first say that home-studies will look different for each state and will even be influenced by the specific country a family is adopting from. No two home-studies are exactly alike which can be a bit frustrating when it comes to finding answers to the numerous questions a first time adoptive parent may have during this process.
Anyway, our social worker walked us through the paperwork we need to compile (copies of birth certificates, marriage license, physical exams, police clearance, financial statements, employee verification letters, autobiographies, online trainings, reading lists etc). Our next meeting with our worker will take place April 29th and will consist of a number of interviews, one with Jon, one with me and then one with the two of us together. Those interviews will count as our next two meetings. The final meeting will serve as our actual home-study where our social worker will come to our house and make sure it meets safety requirements to house a second child.
Once all of those meetings are complete our social worker will condense all of the home-study information into a 14 page document which will be submitted as part of our dossier. Apparently 20+ pages is the norm but India specified that any home-study submitted to them only be 14 pages long. There are more steps before submitting our home-study but to be quite honest I'm not entirely sure what that will look like quite yet.
All in all the meeting was incredibly encouraging. In the course of the hour and a half our worker had some nice things to say about America World. He mentioned that he has worked with numerous agencies and America World is by far one of the best he has ever worked with. We continue to hear stellar reviews and comments from people concerning their experiences with AWAA. What a beautiful reminder of God's calling and leading. He certainly brought us to the right organization.
I love these updates, Kristen! It's amazing how much paperwork there is. Love hearing about it all, though. Keep it up!
ReplyDeleteYou'll be getting plenty of updates as the weeks and months go by. Your support and prayers mean so much to us Laura!!
DeleteWe have been several foster care homestudies as well as adoption homestudies and each of them are different, but in many ways basically the same background and financial info with just some extra things required by other countries. We've always had a good experience with it. It's nice that you feel comfortable with your social worker because that certainly helps. Hope it goes quickly for you.
ReplyDeleteThanks Kathy! So far so good. I'm learning to just take it one day at a time.
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