UH Hilo hosts two-day field study for language revitalization experts
Participants experienced first-hand the Hawaiian language revitalization programs of UH Hilo’s Hawaiian language college and its consortium.
ʻAʻohe pau ka ʻike i ka hālau hoʻokahi │ One learns from many sources │ A web publication from the Office of the Chancellor, University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo
Participants experienced first-hand the Hawaiian language revitalization programs of UH Hilo’s Hawaiian language college and its consortium.
The $190,000 grant will fund three projects designed to advance Hawaiian language revitalization.
The benefit of certification is tied to the shortage of physicians and helps assure more direct patient care on Hawai‘i Island.
The baseline data this project will generate will be useful for decision makers and farmers as the state moves agriculture forward.
The winning team now moves on to the National Health Occupation Students of America (HOSA) national competition in June.
Farmers need to base their decisions on facts, rather than misleading or inaccurate information and activist dogma, for sustainable intensification of agriculture to achieve its potential.
Spanish professor Faith Mishina is doing research and educating her students on events in Latin America about which a great deal of Americans know nothing about, despite being held responsible.
The cohort was trained to make possible the creation of cultural leadership through hula, part of a UH System initiative to make UH a leader in indigenous education.