Shared care is often misunderstood as an arrangement where the child or children spend equal amounts of time with each parent. What it actually means is parents who have separated sharing their time and involvement in bringing up their children in a way that works for their children. If you think about it, even parents who are still together rarely manage to split the childcare 50/50 as work and other life or family commitments mean this is simply not workable.
Co-parenting means building a better relationship with the other parent to enable you to take actions and make decisions in the best interests of your child.
The President of the Family Division, Sir Andrew MacFarlane, recently said that “Co-Operative parenting” is a phrase which is a better phrase. CAFCASS agree with this and say that whilst the phrase “co-parenting” is used widely by professionals, it is rarely by parents themselves.
Ways to do this can include: