Shared Parenting and Supports

Both parents are very special to their children and it is important for children that, where possible, both parents take a positive parenting role in the lives of their children and exercise their responsibilities to their children. Just because a relationship between parents is over, it does not mean that one parent disappears out of the child’s life or mind.

Children in all families benefit from the ongoing affection, interest and concern of both their parents. When parents support their child’s relationship with the other parent, they are promoting their child’s right to an independent and meaningful relationship with each parent. Research shows that children, too, recognise the importance of a continuing relationship or link with both parents, no matter how distant.

What is Shared Parenting?

Shared parenting is the process of supporting the development of children by parents who are not living together, yet parent together. It can be described as parenting by way of good communication, shared decision making, and the sharing of information about your child’s wellbeing. It is based on mutual respect where parents actively work together to create a positive environment where children feel loved, can flourish, and are cared for and supported by both parents.

The Let’s Work it Out programme is currently on hiatus and is not taking any new referrals for the time being.

Need help with shared parenting?

Let’s Work it Out – This is a new service offered through Treoir in collaboration with Dublin Community Mediation. Let’s Work it Out aims to support parents through one-to-one work in developing shared parenting skills.

Why should parents share parenting?

It is widely accepted that shared parenting is in the best interest of children, leading to improved emotional wellbeing of developing children.

  • Shared parenting gives children the possibility of a nurturing relationship with both parents and their extended families.
  • Children have the assurance that both parents still love them even though the parents are not living together.
  • It reassures children that they have two parents, and although they live in separate places, the children have a home with each of them.
  • One parent is not unfairly burdened with the responsibility of discipline whilst the other becomes merely the fun or contact parent.

How does shared parenting work?

Successful shared parenting does not happen by chance. It takes work. It needs parents to:

  • co-operate
  • be patient
  • listen to hear the other parent rather than react to the other parent
  • communicate
  • avoid conflict in front of children
  • put to one side their anger or resentments
  • put their children’s welfare before their own comfort
  • acknowledge that their children want and need both parents
  • develop a new co-operative, parenting relationship with the other parent
  • develop a parenting plan, and try to be flexible as plans may need to change from time-to-time

 

Shared parenting can work well if it’s child-focused rather than adult-focused. The essential element is the goodwill and determination of the parents to make it work.

Make a parenting plan

A parenting plan is a way of sorting out parenting arrangements. A parenting plan sets out how to share time with the children, how to manage responsibilities, and how to make decisions about the children.
School arrangements, childcare, holidays, pocket money can all be part of a parenting plan. Times can be arranged for telephone calls, discussions around money or childrearing, strategies for dealing with differences of opinion if they arise. See further information on Birth RegistrationGuardianship and Maintenance.

A parenting plan

  • provides continuity and predictability for children in their relationship with each parent.
  • means the children will know when they will be with each of you.
  • provides a structure so everyone is clear about future living arrangements.
  • helps to reduce conflict

 

A written plan works best. It makes for clarity and certainty while allowing parents to write into it provisions for flexibility and dealing with the unexpected.

Top Tips

Positive pointers for shared parenting

Mediation

Mediation is where a third party helps parents reach an agreement.  It encourages parents to co-operate with each other in working out the details of shared parenting.

Family Mediation Service: 
Phone – 01-8747446, www.legalaidboard.ie

The Mediators’ Institute of Ireland: Phone – 01-6099190, www.themii.ie

Dublin Community Mediation: 
Phone: – 01 4515910 – Mobile: – 089 9633170 https://www.dcmhelp.ie

Collaborative law – where parents work with specially trained lawyers, receive legal advice and guidance, and together with the lawyers, discuss and resolve issues through face-to-face meetings.

Association of Collaborative Practitioners:  
01 2302157, info@acp.ie, www.acp.ie

Legal Aid Board: Tel:  0818 615 200, www.legalaidboard.ie

Family Links Steps and Stages

We also have a book called Family Links Steps and Stages which goes into more detail about talking to children about their other parent and about shared parenting. It has a good chapter on step-parenting.  This publication can be ordered from Treoir, Call 01 6700 120, and is free of charge to individuals.

“Well done to Treoir for providing this excellent guidance to those who are attempting to co-parent and who may be finding it difficult” – service provider, December 2013

Treoir
Federation of services for unmarried parents and their children
Tel:  01 670 0120, info@treoir.ie | www.treoir.ie

The Legal Aid Board
Locall: 0818 615 200, Tel:  066 947 1000, info@legalaidboard.ie | www.legalaidboard.ie

Free Legal Advice Centres
Tel:  01 9061010 | www.flac.ie

Shared Parenting for Children – Whose parents are not married to each other

Download our shared parenting booklet here