Skip to content
Open the app

Finding support and resources

When you need to find something — counselling, financial help, the library, IT, housing — you shouldn't have to dig through a dozen university web pages. First Six gathers the support your university actually offers into one place.

What you'll find

Your university curates this, so it reflects your campus specifically. Typically it includes:

  • Wellbeing and crisis support — counselling, after-hours lines, and the immediate-help numbers, front and centre.
  • Practical help — money and financial support, housing, IT, the library, transport.
  • People and places — who to talk to, and where things are on campus.
  • Dates that matter — key deadlines and events, often with a countdown so you can see what's coming.

Links open in a new tab so you don't lose your place in the app.

If you're in crisis right now

The immediate-support contacts — like emergency services and crisis lines — are always one tap away in the help flow, and they appear automatically the moment First Six detects you might be in danger. You never have to search for them. See the crisis path.

Two more ways to get answers

  • Ask Anything searches your university's own answers — try it when you have a specific question.
  • Raising a help request reaches a real person when a link isn't enough.

Common questions

Why don't I see a resources section?

Some universities turn specific sections on or off. If it's not there, your support links may live inside the weekly content or the help flow instead.

Are these links specific to my campus?

Yes — your university curates them, so they point to your campus's real services rather than generic national pages (though national crisis lines are included too).

Was this helpful?
Need more help?

The fastest answer is usually one question away.

Edit this page on GitHub