California Foster Care Training Requirements: Pre-Service and Annual Hours
Training is one of the few parts of California's Resource Family Approval process where you actually have control over the pace. You can start before your application is fully processed, take some classes online, and bank hours while waiting for your home assessment. But the format matters, and not every training counts toward every requirement.
Here's what California actually requires, what the curriculum covers, and where to find programs that fit your schedule.
Pre-Service Training: 12 Hours Before Approval
All prospective resource families in California must complete a minimum of 12 hours of pre-approval training before receiving their RFA certificate. This requirement applies whether you're applying through your county welfare department or through a private Foster Family Agency (FFA).
The training is designed to do one specific thing: shift your mindset from traditional parenting to trauma-informed caregiving. Children entering foster care have almost universally experienced significant disruption—removal from their homes, separation from siblings, multiple placements. The training framework addresses this directly.
The 12 hours are typically delivered through:
- MAPP (Model Approach to Partnerships in Parenting): The most widely used curriculum in California counties. Offered in weekly group sessions over 6–8 weeks.
- PRIDE (Pre-service Resource parent Information, Development, and Education): Used by some FFAs and counties as an alternative framework.
- County-specific orientations and workshops: Some counties supplement MAPP with their own sessions covering local policies and agency resources.
What the Curriculum Actually Covers
Knowing what's in the training before you attend helps you go in prepared rather than overwhelmed.
Trauma-Informed Care: This is the backbone of the curriculum. You'll learn about the neurological impact of early trauma on brain development and how it manifests in behavior—why a child who seems to be acting out is often a child whose nervous system is in a constant state of threat response. Techniques for de-escalation, co-regulation, and building felt safety are covered in practical terms.
The Child Welfare System: Who the players are—social workers, CASA volunteers, attorneys, juvenile court judges—and how decisions get made. Understanding the court process and reunification goals helps resource families feel less like bystanders.
The Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) and Cal-ICWA: California has strengthened ICWA beyond the federal standard. Training covers the legal requirements for identifying Native American children, the tribe's right to notice, and what "active efforts" for placement within the tribal community looks like in practice.
Reasonable and Prudent Parent Standard: One of the most practically useful parts of training. This standard empowers resource families to make everyday decisions—allowing a child to go to a sleepover, participate in a school sport, get a haircut—without needing written authorization from a social worker for every activity. Understanding where this authority starts and ends saves enormous friction in daily caregiving.
Permanency and Concurrent Planning: Preparing for the emotional complexity of supporting reunification while simultaneously being prepared for the possibility of adoption. This is where many families first confront the reality of the foster-to-adopt model.
Discipline and Behavior Management: Corporal punishment is strictly prohibited. Training covers alternative discipline techniques grounded in connection-based parenting—approaches that work differently with children who have experienced trauma than with children raised in stable environments.
CPR and First Aid
CPR and First Aid certification is required for RFA approval. Depending on your county:
- Some require completion before the home assessment is scheduled
- Others allow certification within 90 days post-approval
Check with your county or FFA on timing. If you're in Los Angeles, completing this before your first home visit is the safest approach—the county has been inconsistent about allowing post-approval completion.
American Red Cross and American Heart Association both offer in-person certification courses in every California metro area. Some FFAs include CPR certification as part of their onboarding process.
Free Download
Get the California Foster Care Quick-Start Checklist
Everything in this article as a printable checklist — plus action plans and reference guides you can start using today.
Mandated Reporter Training
California Penal Code §11165.7 designates resource parents as mandated reporters—meaning you are legally required to report suspected abuse or neglect to the appropriate authorities. Mandated Reporter training is typically a short online course (1–2 hours) available through the California Department of Social Services or through county-specific portals.
This is usually completed online, counts toward your training hours, and should be done early in the process.
Online Training Options
California does allow some training to be completed online. Which hours count as online varies by county:
- Foster Parent College (fosterparentcollege.com): A widely accepted platform for renewal training (counted toward annual hours). Some counties accept FPC courses for portions of pre-service hours. Confirm with your county or FFA before relying on FPC for pre-service credit.
- Mandated Reporter Training: Always accepted online.
- County-specific online modules: Many counties now offer hybrid or fully online orientations and some curriculum modules.
The live MAPP or PRIDE training—the core 12 hours—is generally required in person or via live video session, not self-paced online. This is because a significant portion of the learning involves discussion with other prospective families and direct engagement with trainers who can answer questions in real time.
Annual Renewal Training: 8 Hours
Once approved, resource families must complete 8 hours of training per approval year to maintain their RFA status. Annual training is more flexible than pre-service training in terms of format—Foster Parent College courses, county workshops, and FFA-sponsored trainings all typically count.
Topic areas for renewal training include:
- Updates on state policy changes (new Written Directives versions, legislative changes)
- Specific skill areas: managing sibling groups, supporting LGBTQ+ youth, therapeutic parenting techniques
- County-specific practice updates
Missing annual training triggers an RFA renewal issue—your approval can lapse if you don't document your hours. Keep records of every training certificate you receive.
The California Foster Care Licensing Guide includes guidance on which training formats are accepted in major California counties, how to document your hours, and what to do if your county's schedule doesn't align with your timeline.
Get Your Free California Foster Care Quick-Start Checklist
Download the California Foster Care Quick-Start Checklist — a printable guide with checklists, scripts, and action plans you can start using today.