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Noa • College of Education A NUMBER 35 • 2013 CURRENTS– UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI‘I MA NOA • COLLEGE OF EDUCATION A SENSE OF PURPOSE. A SENSE OF PLACE. CURRENTS DEAN’S OFFICE Currents is published by the College of Education at Donald B. Young, Dean .............................................................. (808) 956-7703 the University of Hawai‘i at Ma– noa and distributed to Beth Pateman, Associate Dean for Academic Affairs ........................ (808) 956-7704 faculty, staff, students, alumni, retirees, and friends of Sheryl Tashima, Chief Administrative Officer .................................. (808) 956-5776 the college. Melvin Spencer, Office of Student Academic Services Director ............ (808) 956-4275 Paul McKimmy, Technology & Distance Programs Director .............. (808) 956-6266 http://coe.hawaii.edu Mona Chock, International and Special Program Director ................. (808) 956-4523 Mark Fukeda, Director of Development........................................... (808) 956-7988 Jennifer Parks, Communications Coordinator ................................... (808) 956-0416 CURRENTS STAFF Jennifer Parks, Editor Aaron Lee, Graphic Designer Jaret Leong, Production Coordinator CHANGE OF ADDRESS For a change of address, please notify the University of Hawai‘i, College of Education, Communications Coordinator, 1776 University Avenue, EH 128, Honolulu, HI 96822. Email: [email protected] SUBMISSIONS If you have a story idea or a comment, please write to University of Hawai‘i, College of Education, Communications Coordinator, 1776 University Avenue, EH 128, Honolulu, HI 96822. Email: [email protected] GOING GREEN Please support our green efforts by opting for an electronic version of COE Currents and the Annual Report if you have not already done so. Send an email to the communications coordinator at [email protected] and include your preferred email address as well as the mailing address where we have been sending you the magazine. CONTENTS 04 09 PROGRAMS & PROJECTS FACULTY & STAFF 22 26 OUT & ABOUT STUDENTS & ALUMNI 34 36 FEATURE DONORS & FRIENDS 1 DEAN DONALD B. YOUNG DEAN’S MESSAGE elcome to Currents 2012, the ment of Education in its Race-to-the-Top in China, Japan, Kazakhstan, Norway, College of Education’s magazine initiative and Common Core State Stan- Papua New Guinea, and Vietnam. Indi- W focusing on the achievements of dards implementation through course vidual faculty members are involved in our students, faculty, alumni, donors, development, professional development, collaborative research and consulting in and friends. As a land-grant institution, early childhood education initiatives, and numerous other countries as well. As a the University of Hawai‘i is committed the Hawai‘i Partnerships for Educational result, the college is working to provide to improving education in the state and Research Consortium. Over 100 programs our students with international experi- region, preschool through graduate school. are serving students, teachers, and schools ences that will better prepare them as The College of Education supports this on neighbor islands. educators in a global community. These mission through teacher preparation, are indeed exciting times. leadership development, research, and its This year, we were able to hire superb application in education improvement. new faculty in critical areas of science Flip over your issue of Currents to find and mathematics education, early child- our Annual Report for 2012, which pro- In this issue, you will learn about our hood education, special education, English vides data on our productivity, financial programs, accomplishments, and pro- language learning, reading, rehabilitation resources and expenditures, and diversity. ductivity. As you will see, our college is counseling, learning technology, and edu- Ours is a dynamic, energetic, and innova- complex, offering some 23 degrees/cer- cational administration. This positions the tive college, and I am proud to be asso- tificates in both teacher preparation and college to better address state workforce ciated with such creative and committed leadership development. This year, we development needs. You will read about faculty and staff. began admitting freshmen to the college some of our new faculty members in the for the first time since the mid-1960s, following pages. Enjoy. increasing our enrollment to just under 2,000, almost equally divided between We are growing internationally with undergraduate and graduate programs. memoranda of agreement, or letters of We are supporting the Hawai‘i Depart- intent to collaborate, with institutions Donald B. Young - Dean 2 DID YOU KNOW? IN A YEAR, THE COLLEGE OF EDUCATION… Produces more than 65% of the state’s teaching force (estimated by Hawai‘i DOE) 23 Enrolls nearly 2,000 students Awards nearly 700 degrees (5-year average) DEGREES AND Employs 350+ faculty, staff, and support SPECIALIZATIONS personnel (2012 average) 5 Baccalaureate Degrees (4 BEd, 1 BS) Attracts approximately $20 million in contracts and grants 2 Post-Baccalaureate Certificates Receives more than $1 million from 4 Graduate Certificates alumni and friends 9 Master’s Degrees (7 MEd, 1 MS, 1 MEdT) Awards approximately $250,000 in scholarships to students with the average 3 Doctoral Degrees (2 PhD, 1 EdD) award at $2,000 THE COLLEGE OF EDUCATION ALSO… Consistently ranks among the top 50 Offers certificate programs in disability graduate schools in education in U.S. and diversity studies, secondary educa- News and World Report tion, special education, reading, early childhood education, and online learning Has the only nationally accredited and teaching teacher education and athletic training programs in Hawai‘i Provides programs through distance (online) education, especially for neigh- Addresses the needs of Hawai‘i through bor island students, through targeted teacher preparation, professional statewide cohort programs development, curriculum development, and research programs Serves neighbor island students, teach- ers, and schools through over 100 pro- Produces more educational leaders grams and projects and teachers than all other education programs in the state combined 3 PROGRAMS & PROJECTS 4 CURRENTS #35 • 2013 PROGRAMS & PROJECTS Ranking at the Top The College of Education has been ranked one of the top 50 graduate schools of edu- Neil Pateman, Kalei Tim Sing, Joe Zilliox, ‘Iwalani Hodges & Pam Alo cation in the nation for three consecutive years. In the 2013 edition of U.S. News & World Report’s survey, the college placed Receiving International Recognition 49th out of 280 schools. As in previous years, the college was also in the top ten The College of Education Ho‘okula- Councils of the Hawaiian Home- of external funding recipients for research, iwi Center for Native Hawaiian and lands Assembly (SCHHA) and the having been awarded more than $20 Indigenous Education was recog- Hawai‘i Department of Education million in contracts and grants in 2011. nized by the American Educational (DOE), Ho‘okula-iwi participated in Dean Don Young said, “This outstand- Research Association at its annual a special presidential session, Acting ing achievement is a credit to our excel- meeting which was held in Vancou- on What We Know: Exemplary Models lent faculty and programs. The College ver, Canada in April 2012. As part of Educational Research and Practice in of Education has consistently been in the of a partnership with the Sovereign Indigenous Schools and Communities. top tier of programs in the nation. This latest recognition acknowledges our efforts to improve educational outcomes for all our students.” Reaching out to Celebrity Chefs College of Education Professor Cristy Hawai‘i in January 2012 and cook for Kessler has been doing some excit- outreach programs through the Parish of ing, innovative, and tasty work with St. Clement, Honolulu. Kessler persuaded Ho‘okula-iwi cohort students. In March Starr and Adrien Nieto to return in March 2012, she hosted two well-known chefs and accompany her on a site visit to from the mainland who worked with Wai‘anae High School. Starr, Nieto, and college and high school students at Ma‘o fellow contestant-chef, Christian Collins, Farm in Wai‘anae. The hands-on learning spent the day talking to students about experience culminated with the prepara- farming and working together on the tion of a gourmet meal using food from school’s certified organic farm. “I fell in the farm. A huge fan of the television love with this school,” Starr said. “They cooking competition MasterChef, Kessler are doing incredible things to keep kids reached out to contestants from season in school and transition them to college, two via Twitter. Four of the show’s chefs, particularly in the area of agriculture and including Ben Starr, agreed to come to culinary arts.” Ben Starr 5 PROGRAMS & PROJECTS Featuring Prominent Educational Leader Hosting a Dynamic Fulbright Scholar and Artist Fulbright Scholar and international wheelchair racer Yevgeniy Tetyukhin spent his first few months at the College of Education Center on Disabilities Dr. Victor Kobayashi was the guest (CDS) speaking to various groups at the college, traveling, participating in the speaker at the Shiro Amioka Lecture in Honolulu Marathon, and preparing for a trip to Guam. A linguistics professor July 2012. His lecture focused on the and disability advocate from North Kazakhstan State University, the charis- importance of the aesthetic experience in matic and infectiously optimistic Tetyukhin also conducted research, audited all areas of education, including
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