Kiddipedia

Kiddipedia

Written by Lucas Patchett OAM, CEO and Co-Founder of Orange Sky. Orange Sky is a not-for-profit organisation providing a free, mobile laundry and shower service for people experiencing homelessness, hardship and isolation. Their mission is to positively connect communities across the country. Every week, more than 4,000 volunteers come together to provide a safe, genuine and non-judgemental space for people who are too often ignored or feel disconnected from the community.

When you ask a class of students what the word “homelessness” means, you’ll often hear the same answer: “someone sleeping on the street.” It’s an image many of us grew up with, one that’s reinforced repeatedly in movies, media and everyday language, but it tells only one part of the story.

Across Australia, over 122,494 people are experiencing homelessness in many different forms. Whether it be families moving between temporary accommodation, young people couch surfing, or individuals cycling through overcrowded or insecure housing, homelessness can look like many different situations, often hidden in plain sight. It is a complex, deeply human issue and one that is too often misunderstood.
The key defining factor is a lack of stable, safe, and affordable housing, not a lack of effort or worth. This is an important lesson for all of us, especially our young people.

Recent research we commissioned found that only one in ten Australians feel very confident they could correctly define homelessness. This gap in understanding shines a light on why homelessness education is such a powerful and important tool, helping the next generation build empathy, challenge stereotypes and develop understanding beyond the surface.


The friend who changed everything

When I was still in school, I volunteered with my co-founder, Nic, on a food van. One night, we met a man named Harry. He was friendly, quick with a joke, and always up for a chat. We didn’t know it at the time, but that first conversation with Harry would shape the direction of our lives.

Harry told us about growing up in institutions, being taken from his mother, and the challenges he’d faced. But what stood out was his sense of community:

Family is number one,” he told us. “Second is get along with people. And third is my football team… Go the Pies!

That connection with Harry shaped our understanding and perception of homelessness. He wasn’t a statistic — he was a person with warmth, humour, and openness. He helped us see that homelessness isn’t just about housing – it’s about disconnection.
And sometimes, the most powerful thing you can offer is a conversation and a place to feel seen.

Today, Harry still comes to multiple Orange Sky shifts every week. He doesn’t come to wash his belongings – he comes to chat and connect.

“I’ve got my own washing machine,” he says, “but I still come down because I like doing it. The people are great!

That’s the power of connection. And that’s the heart of why we believe homelessness education belongs in every classroom.


Why education matters

At Orange Sky, we have spent over a decade listening to the stories and lived experiences of people doing it tough. Every conversation reminds us that understanding creates connection, and connection empowers change.

Young people are naturally curious and compassionate. When given the opportunity to learn about social issues through an age-appropriate and engaging lens, they develop empathy rather than judgement.
With World Homeless Day (10 October 2025) this month, we launched free education resources for schools to help students learn about homelessness in a safe and inclusive way.

These classroom resources encourage open conversation about what makes a home, why housing insecurity can happen, and how communities can work together to support one another.
This curriculum tool helps students understand that this is not an issue of blame or guilt but rather that everyone deserves safety, dignity, and belonging.


Replacing stigma with compassion

Our research revealed that three quarters (74%) of Australians believe more needs to be done to educate communities about homelessness.
While two-thirds (66%) demonstrate familiarity with “primary homelessness”, awareness drops for “secondary” (51%) and “tertiary homelessness” (33%).

These findings show how reinforced stereotypes shape the way we think and talk about social issues.
A stronger focus on education can shift that narrative.
When students understand that housing insecurity can impact anyone – families, young people, the elderly – it builds empathy and replaces stigma with compassion.

By teaching broader definitions of homelessness and exploring its causes, schools can play a pivotal role in shaping the attitudes of future generations.
It’s about moving the conversation away from “what went wrong?” to “how can we help make things right?”


Learning through real connections

Homelessness education is part of a bigger picture that includes reforms around housing, health, mental wellbeing and social inclusion.
But starting with education means starting with connection — and this is what leads to meaningful change.

Our education resources were developed with this principle in mind.
Each module includes age-appropriate activities, lesson plans, quizzes, and stories that encourage reflective thinking.
Students are invited to explore what home means to them, hear real experiences of resilience, and discuss how we can all make a difference.

When young people learn that everyone deserves a safe place to call home, we’re giving them not only knowledge but also the tools to build supportive communities.
Our goal is to help them see that homelessness is about all of us, and how we can look after one another.


Our role in building empathy

As parents, caregivers and role models, we have an undeniable influence on how young people see and respond to the world.
Children learn empathy not only from the classroom, but from conversations at home — how we talk about difference, fairness, and community.

By talking openly about what homelessness really means, we help children develop understanding that lasts a lifetime.
You don’t need all the answers — sometimes, simply asking questions together makes all the difference:

What does home mean to you?
How can we show kindness to people doing it tough?

These everyday conversations help young people see that compassion and respect start with how we listen, think, and talk.
When families and schools work together to nurture empathy, we help raise future leaders who see others through a lens of dignity and hope.


Looking ahead

Education is one of the most powerful tools we have to shape the future.
By talking about homelessness openly in schools and homes, we can set off a chain reaction of understanding across the country.

At Orange Sky, we’ve seen how understanding can be as powerful as a clean load of washing or a warm shower — it brings people closer and builds communities of belonging.

Harry once told us,

Every time I come down here, I feel good.

That feeling of being welcomed, heard, and valued is what we want every student to learn they can help create.

When empathy becomes part of everyday learning, we’re not just teaching about housing insecurity — we’re teaching about humanity.

To explore Orange Sky’s free education resources or learn more about what we do, visit orangesky.org.au.

About the Author

Lucas Patchett OAM is the CEO and Co-Founder of Orange Sky. Lucas, along with friend Nic Marchesi, co-founded Orange Sky in 2014 at just 20 years old. Starting from humble beginnings, with a couple of washing machines and dryers installed in an old van to provide dignity and improve hygiene standards of those sleeping rough around Brisbane, Lucas and Nic have expanded Orange Sky substantially. To date, Orange Sky has provided Australians doing it tough with over 1.9 million kilograms of free laundry, 20,000 showers and 330,000 hours of genuine and non-judgemental conversation across 51 service locations.

Citations

  1. ABS Estimating Homelessness Census 2021

About the Research

The research was commissioned by Orange Sky and conducted by YouGov between 19 – 29 June 2025. The sample was comprised of a nationally representative sample of n=1,367 Australian residents aged 18+. The data has been weighted by age, gender and region to reflect the latest ABS population estimates.