Mid-Year Update 2024

By engaging families, often women with pre-school aged children (many of whom don’t attend services elsewhere), hubs also:

    • help children develop social and language skills, resilience and prepare them for school;
    • provide participants with the opportunity to learn and practise their English; and
    • support entry into broader vocational pathways including volunteering,
      skills training, and work.

In 2024, we welcomed seven new schools to the network and farewelled Colyton Public School in Blacktown (NSW).

Previous Reports

Hub Census 2025 – Key findings
The Hub Census 2025 highlights the significant role community hubs play in building belonging, strengthening early learning, and supporting pathways to participation and employment.
2025 in Review
This report highlights key outcomes, participation and impact from across the national community hubs network in 2025, reflecting progress at a national level and the ongoing support hubs provide to families through schools and local communities.
Mid-Year Update 2025
At the six-month mark of 2025, we look back on some of the stories of impact from our hubs network. The first half of 2025 has brought encouraging momentum – from sustaining a strong national footprint of 98 hubs to continuing the vital support hubs provide to families throughout the school year.
Independent evaluation: Deloitte Access Economics
The National Community Hubs Program (NCHP) was established in 2013 to engage newly arrived communities at risk of limited access to education, health and social services, and opportunities for economic independence.
Scanlon Foundation Research Institute Narrative 10 – Community in the Classroom
The purpose of this, our 10th Narrative, is to highlight the success of the work of Community Hubs Australia in primary schools and to consider whether the premise behind them could be applied in a secondary school context.
Knowledge Translation to Support Early Learning of Refugee Children and their Families
The research presented in this report is based on a three-year study that focussed on developing understandings and resources to support current and future community hubs and centres with the settlement and early learning of refugee children and their families.