UH ²Ñ¨¡²Ô´Ç²¹ grad wins $25,000 Milken Educator Award
Ken Kang is the technology coordinator at ʻAiea High, his alma mater, and started the school¡¯s first STEM class in 2015.
Ken Kang is the technology coordinator at ʻAiea High, his alma mater, and started the school¡¯s first STEM class in 2015.
The program will develop teachers as leaders to discover multiple approaches to teaching and learning mathematics through project-based and place-based experiences.
In support of its goal to become a model indigenous serving institution, UH has been awarded almost $3.9 million in grants by the U.S. DOE’s Native Hawaiian Education Program.
Nathan Murata is currently professor and graduate chair of the college¡¯s Department of Kinesiology and Rehabilitation Science.
Paulette Yamada¡¯s Hubert V. Everly Endowed Scholar in Education award will support the launch of a student-centered research program to use exercise training to maintain the health of cancer survivors.
D. Brent Edwards brings a new focus and new insights to the phenomena of global education policies and, relatedly, international policy transfer in his new book, The Trajectory of Global Education Policy.
The Uehiro Academy for Philosophy and Ethics in Education is home to p4c Âé¶¹´«Ã½, an innovative approach to education that is transforming the schooling experience by engaging people in the activity of philosophy.
Hannah M. Tavares, a UH ²Ñ¨¡²Ô´Ç²¹ College of Education associate professor, received the American Educational Studies Association Critic¡¯s Choice Book Award for Pedagogies of the Image: Photo-archives, Cultural Histories and Postfoundational Inquiry.
Colonel Michael Fincke will discuss how education and amazing teachers have impacted his life and career.
The Âé¶¹´«Ã½²Ñ¨¡²Ô´Ç²¹ College of Education will award up to $600,000 in scholarship stipends to recruit new teacher candidates, who already serve in educational capacities in our state.