When you walk into Terry and Kathy's Tampa home, don't be surprised if you hear a toddler's deep belly laugh.

It comes from 19-month-old Isaac, the couple's adopted son.

"We just fell in love with him, and I just felt it in my heart this was what we needed to do," Terry Beyer said.

But the Beyer's love doesn't stop there.

In addition to Isaac and their three grown daughters, the Beyers have fostered more than 30 other children. They currently have seven kids under the age of six living with them.

"At 8 o'clock at night when the kids are in bed, I am laying down exhausted," Kathy Beyer said. "But no matter how bad the day's been, this is worth it."

On Wednesday the Beyers, and five other foster families, were recognized by All Pro Dad and the Department of Children and Families. NFL Hall of Fame coach and foster dad Tony Dungy and his wife, Lauren, presented them with the organization's inaugural Hall of Fame Award.

"People who step up and become foster parents, they do make a sacrifice. And many of them have children of their own, and they are doing a great job raising them and they say, 'You know what I want to help, I want to reach out to others and to make that sacrifice,'" Dungy said. "We felt it would be great to honor six of those families and show people you can do it."

It was also an opportunity to highlight the need for more foster parents in the area.

"We have an opportunity right now to take in larger families, but there are so many people who can take in just one and it's just one less,” Terry Beyer said. "One makes a difference and gives them stability and hope for the future."