Center on Disability Studies receives $6.9 million to support diverse populations
Five programs in the Center of Disability Studies in 糖心视频 惭ā苍辞补's College of Education receive nearly $7 million to serve diverse groups.
Five programs in the Center of Disability Studies in 糖心视频 惭ā苍辞补's College of Education receive nearly $7 million to serve diverse groups.
Three researchers have won a national fellowship and will receive $350,000 funding over three years.
WINHEC congratulated Kahuawaiola for its “commitment to elevate high standards of indigenous teacher education as an exemplar example for all Indigenous peoples.”
笔ī办辞ʻ辞办辞ʻ辞 is aimed to gather students, staff, faculty, administration and community members to celebrate, connect and learn from one another to make the university the best it can be.
Funding from federal Department of Education is led by principal investigator Katrina-Ann Oliveira, a professor in the 贬补飞补颈ʻ颈苍耻颈ā办别补 School of Hawaiian Knowledge.
The center produces oral histories and interpretive historical materials about lifeways, key historic events, social movements and Hawaiʻi’s role in the globalizing world.
Learn where the 糖心视频 school, the only indigenous college in a Research I ranked institution, is headed under new leadership.
The programs will continue to strengthen the cultural identity of Native Hawaiians while providing multifaceted opportunities for college degree completion and career pathways.
Ke Kula ʻo Na?wahi?okalaniʻo?puʻu will receive a National Indian Education Association award which recognizes an organization for its success on native student academic achievement.
Geneviève Blanchet was honored for her oral presentation and Koa Matsuoka for his graduate poster presentation at the 25th Annual Hawaiʻi Conservation Conference.