Ancient Is Modern—Transforming Public Education for Hawaiians

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2020

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Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press and the Center for Biographical Research

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The COVID-19 crisis presents unprecedented opportunities to reimagine and redesign our failing public school system, especially to meet the needs of Native Hawaiians, Hawaiʻi’s largest and most undereducated and uneducated ethnic group. This paper presents a vision of a Hawaiian model of education grounded in a research-based Pedagogy of Aloha, as a prototype for intergenerational places of learning throughout Hawaiʻi that are culturally-driven, family-oriented, community-based, and both traditional and contemporary, empowering learners to walk successfully in multiple worlds.

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Indigenous education, Hawaiian education, culturally-driven pedagogy, teaching spaces, blended learning, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Regional Studies, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Indigeneous Studies, HISTORY / Oceania, POLITICAL SCIENCE / General

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4 pages

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CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

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