Teaching With her friend Newcomb, Hodge emigrated to
Sydney in September 1897 to establish teacher training courses on the invitation of Professor Walter Scott of the Teachers' Association of New South Wales. Hodge and Newcomb founded Shirley School and Kindergarten, a girls' demonstration and training school, on Edgecliff Road, Sydney in January 1900. Trainee kindergarten teachers were often new immigrants that had arrived in the Australian colony from Britain. Shirley School had 100 students by the end of the first year and pupils included
Kathleen Ussher and
Eunice Mort. Hodge wrote for the school's
Shirley magazine. Shirley School and Kindergarten incorporated the Swedish system of gymnastics devised by
Pehr Henrik Ling and was one of the first female schools in Australia with a permanent cricket team. Supporting the less fortunate was fundamental to the institution, with "service for others" considered "the noblest part of self education." Funds raised at school plays were given to the New South Wales Home for Incurables, an annual Christmas party was held for local poor children and warm garments were sewn for the Surrey Hills Free Kindergarten pupils. Hodge then wrote the training courses for primary and secondary teachers for
The Women's College of the
University of Sydney, where she was appointed an honorary lecturer in the theory and practice of education.
Women's suffrage Hodge and Newcomb were active suffragists in Australia. They both joined the
Womanhood Suffrage League of New South Wales (WSL) and the
National Council of Women of Australia (NCW). Hodge and Australian suffragist
Vida Goldstein gave papers at the NCW congress in 1904 and both Hodge and Newcomb read papers at the
Australasian Association for the Advancement of Science (ANZAAS). Hodge additionally worked alongside Australian suffragist
Rose Scott on behalf of female prisoners. In 1902, Hodge became ill and returned to England. She was elected a vice-president of the Australian Women's Political and Educational League
in absentia and had returned to Australia by 1903. In 1907, Hodge was elected vice-president of the
New South Wales branch of the
Peace Society. Hodge became unwell again, so both she and Newcomb returned to Britain in October 1908, visiting educational institutions in Japan and the United States
en route home. == Later life in England ==