BULLYING HURTS.
HEROES HELP.

100 Acts of kindness. 31 Days. 

Help End Bullying

this October.

YOU can be the hero kids need.

One act of kindness. One donation. One step closer to ending bullying. Support your local centre during the Hero Hundred.

Help us reach our target!

Healthy Harold needs YOU on his kindness mission!

Devastatingly, 1 in 3 kids in Queensland are now targeted by bullying.

Bullying steals confidence, erodes resilience, and impacts mental health and wellbeing long into adulthood.

This is a problem that has reached crisis level and we need to act.

You can be the hero who changes everything

With your support, we can provide programs to help kids build resilience, show kindness, stand up for themselves and others and stay safe in both the real and online worlds.

We must act now to protect the next generation. Early intervention is the key. 

How it works

100 acts of kineness

In October, Edge Early Learning centres are taking on the challenge to make 100 acts of kindness happen in their centres. Teaching children respect, empathy and resilience.

Show your support

Each act of kindness will be celebrated on posters in your centre. Back your child's efforts by donating, every dollar raised helps protect kids from bullying.

Grow the kindness

Want to go even further to help your child's kindness mission? Gather your mates, your workplace and rally support.

This is the future we're fundraising for

As seen on

We're taking on the hero hundred for kids like Isla*

Isla was just 11 when bullying turned her school days from carefree to crushing. Rumours, exclusion, and constant online harassment isolated her, dimming the spark that had always defined her vibrant personality. The bullying didn’t stop at school, it followed Isla everywhere, in her pocket, on her phone, waiting in the next notification. There was no escape

We're taking on the hero hundred to help more kids like Carter

Carter faced intense bullying at school that left him anxious, withdrawn, and afraid.  The constant teasing and physical violence he endured left him feeling isolated, and didn't want to stand up for himself or others out of fear of retaliation. His mum, could see that Carter was unhappy, but she didn't know how to help him open up.