Tag Archives: student success

🧠 PsyClub Neuroscience Nerd Out! 🧠 Friday, 9/24, 1:00-3:00pm

Feeling Stressed?  Yeah, us too. It happens!

Fortunately, the Psychology Club at KapCC has you covered!

Stop by for our Neuroscience Nerd Out where we will explore some Non-Sleep Deep Rest (and other) activities that have been shown to help promote relaxation, facilitate memory consolidation, and improve mental focus.

We will be nerding out THIS Friday, September 24, from 1:00 – 3:00 pm via Zoom! If you have questions please contact the Psychology Club Officers at psyclub@hawaii.edu.

See flyer below for zoom link and additional information.

🧠 PsyClub Social THIS FRIDAY 🧠

Positive social engagement promotes feelings of well-being and helps reduce stress! 

#PsyNerds know the value of some good company and we’re looking for people to share it with! So let’s get connected! Everyone is welcome to join!  😎

Our Semester Social Kick-Off is THIS FRIDAY, September 10th, from 1:00 – 3:00pm via Zoom!

See the flyer below for the Zoom Link or contact our club officers at  psyclub@hawaii.edu with questions!

🧠 Psychology Club Social THIS FRIDAY!! 🧠

Do you have a Brain? 🧠

If the answer is “Yes” then YOU should join the Psychology Club!

We know times are tough and it’s hard to feel connected, but we’ve got you covered! Come hang out, make some friends, and add some new wrinkles to that beautiful brain of yours! Everyone is welcome to join! #PsyNerdsLoveCompany 😎

Please reach out to the PsyClub Officers with questions, they will be happy to help you out: psyclub@hawaii.edu

Our Semester Social Kick-Off is THIS FRIDAY, September 10th, from 1:00 – 3:00pm via Zoom!

See the flyer below for the Zoom link and additional information!

🧠 Come Nerd Out With The Psychology Club!! 🧠

The Psychology Club is back for another fun-filled (virtual) semester!

We know times are tough and it’s hard to feel connected, but we’ve got you covered! Come hang out with the PsyClub, make some friends, and add some new wrinkles to that beautiful brain of yours! Everyone is welcome to join! #PsyNerdsLoveCompany

This semester we have plans for a book club, guest speakers, movie night, RIO Booths, workshops, and other awesome events to help you shake off those COVID Blues. 😎

Meetings and events will be held every other Friday via Zoom, from 1:00 – 3:00 pm. We will kick off the new school year with our Start of Semester Social on Friday, September 10!

If you’re interested in joining or have questions about the club, please reach out to the PsyClub Officers: psyclub@hawaii.edu

See the flyer below for additional information!

Student award at the SACNAS conference

Join us to celebrate Kapi’olani students’ success at the 2019 SACNAS conference!

Alden Fernandez, Jaynine Parico, Brent Shigano, Cory Siqueira, Dikshika Shrestha presented their work on “Designing 3D-Printed Models of Geographic Locations to Use with the AR Sandbox”

Jaynine Parico, Alden Fernandez, Brent Shigano, Dikshika Shrestha, Cory Siqueira, “Application of Geographic Information System (GIS) Data in an Augmented-Reality Sandbox to Illustrate and Map the Maunalua Bay Watershed”

Jennifer Chinen, “Creating a Noise-Cancelling System to Reduce Whale Beaching Events Caused by Ship Noise”,

Sheri Lei Marzan, “Web-Based Digital Sensor System to Track Real-Time Flow”

Keanu Rochette Yu-Tsuen, “Sun Protection Factor Assessment of Naupaka Kahakai Extract (Scaevola taccada) on Saccharomyces cerevisiae”.

Special congratulations to Sheri Lei Marzan, and her mentor Dr. Aaron Hanai, who was awarded for her poster presentation in Engineering, where she competed with four-year universities across the country and  in turn positioned our College and STEM program at the forefront of the conference’s outcomes. Her work strives to track and reduce water consumption at Kapiʻolani Community College as part of Engineers for a Sustainable Club. The water monitoring systems are currently located in 220 Grille and in a biology lab in Kokiʻo.

The Society for Advancement of Chicanos/Hispanics and Native Americans in Science (SACNAS) is an inclusive organization dedicated to fostering the success of Chicanos/Hispanics and Native Americans, from college students to professionals, in attaining advanced degrees, careers, and positions of leadership in STEM. The conference is the largest multidisciplinary and multicultural STEM diversity event in the country.

 

Next Generation of Title III Projects Embrace Cooperation 

On October 1, 2019, Kapiʻolani Community College will launch four new Title III projects to take its commitment to Native Hawaiian student success to the next level. Building upon over two decades of successful Title III initiatives, Kapiʻolani CC was awarded two federal grants worth nearly $3 million from the U.S. Department of Education to strengthen campus infrastructure to promote Native Hawaiian student success. The College also is included as a partner in two collaborative Title III grants, with Honolulu CC and with Chaminade University. Dean of Arts and Sciences Nāwa‘a Napoleon sees the impact of these grants as providing us with “an opportunity to better support our students, better support each other, and work together to uplift the namesake of our College.”

The next generation of Title III projects embodies the spirit of the campus to huliāmahi, to “collaborate, join together in cooperation.” In support of the career exploration and lifelong development of Native Hawaiian students, these projects are rooted in huli (to seek, investigate, and change) and mahi (strong and energetic). These projects will build lasting relationships among campus leaders and students who are committed to working together to solve the most pressing challenges facing enrollment, persistence, transfer, and graduation of Native Hawaiian students. Chancellor Louise Pagotto underlined the focus on the two beneficiaries of the grant, “Title III funds are clearly and strategically aimed to improve the success of our Native Hawaiian students through direct support and indirectly through professional development programs that enhance faculty’s pedagogical strategies to promote that success.”

Huliāmahi: Joining Together to Support Guided Pathways to Success (Five-year Collaborative with University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa)

Kapiʻolani CC will develop a comprehensive educational pipeline in partnership with University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Hawaiʻinuiākea to provide robust student support services facilitating pre-transfer, post-transfer and for-credit experiential learning opportunities for Native Hawaiian students. Networking and intentional opportunities for students, staff, and faculty to develop their career and research potential are also important cornerstones for the collaborative. This collaborative strategically focuses enrollment management to include the growing population of Native Hawaiian students actively recruited through ongoing campus efforts from Hawaiian language immersion schools and other public high schools. The total five-year infrastructural improvements at both campuses are worth over $2.1 million in federal funding.

Huliāmahi – Joining Together to Support Guided Pathways to Success (Two-year Campus Award)

Strong communities of practice are the foundation of thriving schools and students. To this end, Kapiʻolani CC will foster a community of practice through two faculty cohorts selected to participate in collaborative academic and student support strategies. This two-year project will increase the capacity of instructional faculty, counselors and Native Hawaiian student support personnel working in a community of practice to improve Native Hawaiian re-enrollment, degree completion and transfer. This award will provide a boost to campus funding for professional development and technology worth nearly $700,000 over the next two years.

Kūkalahale: Building an Indigenous-Serving Institution through Professional Development (Five-year collaborative with Honolulu Community College) 

Kapiʻolani CC is partnering with Honolulu Community College to innovate indigenous education frameworks in professional development. The College will increase capacity to implement indigenous education frameworks and support student success on their campuses and increase access to training on indigenous education methodologies to other campuses in support of the University of Hawaiʻi’s mission to become a model indigenous-serving institution. The collaborative will build capacity of faculty, staff, and administration to develop and sustain culturally appropriate and culturally relevant strategies that kipaipai (encourage) current and future Native Hawaiian students.

Strengthening Community College Partnerships, Peer Mentorship, and Experiential Learning (Five-year collaborative with Chaminade University)

Kapiʻolani CC is partnering with Chaminade University to expand transfer pathways to four-year degrees through shared faculty development initiatives, enhancement of learning spaces, and establishing a Ka Hiki Mai Scholars Program. This collaborative will create program-to-program transfer articulation agreements to offer new educational opportunities for students.

For Dean Napoleon, “all four grants support creating pathways/experiences that bridge students from high school to Kapiʻolani CC and from Kapiʻolani CC to a four-year institution..  For faculty and staff, these four grants will help support them in learning and assessing how we know, how we do things, how we live together at the institution, and how we can be the pillars to hold our students up.” The next generation of Title III projects will establish a Community of Practice reinforced through ongoing professional development that will “address supporting instruction in personal financial literacy, knowledge of markets and economics, knowledge of higher education financing and repayment (e.g., college savings and student loans), or other skills aimed at building personal financial understanding and responsibility.” Kapiʻolani CC will improve student support services through professional development of current faculty, counselors, and staff to fortify its academic pathways, access to financial aid, career exploration and professional development for Native Hawaiian students. Ultimately, Kapiʻolani CC seeks to close and eliminate achievement gaps and better prepare Native Hawaiian students for productive persistence to transfer and career opportunities.

Link to project abstracts:

  1. Huliāmahi: Joining Together to Support Guided Pathways to Success (Five-year Collaborative with University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa)
  2. Huliāmahi – Joining Together to Support Guided Pathways to Success (Two-year Campus Award)
  3. Kūkalahale: Building an Indigenous-Serving Institution through Professional Development (Five-year collaborative with Honolulu Community College)
  4. Strengthening Community College Partnerships, Peer Mentorship, and Experiential Learning (Five-year collaborative with Chaminade University)

Related links:

Inaugural Symposium Highlights Strategies for Native Hawaiian Student Success

Panelists Keisha Nakamura, Angela Coloretti-McGouch, Michaelyn Nakoa, Keomailani Eaton, and Keauhou Mitchell-Aldan.

On behalf of the Shared Services Center, we thank congratulate the panelists for the inaugural symposium featuring the scholarship and perspectives of five fabulous Fellows. We reached a new milestone in our campus’ mission to become a model Native Hawaiian and indigenous serving institution through the Symposium, Ka Wa Mā Hope: The Future is in Back of Us.

The Symposium marks the first time in our campus history that we have brought together scholars among our colleagues who are pursuing graduate programs focused on promoting Native Hawaiian student success. The Symposium elevated the scholarship of five emerging leaders across Kapiʻolani Community College by through their scholarly research on Native Hawaiian Student Success in Today’s Higher Education Landscape. The panelists were:

  1. Michaelyn Nākoa – (Counselor, Coordinator, Kapo’oloku Program for Native Hawaiian Student Success) Ph.D candidate fall 2019, Educational Psychology.
  2. Angela Coloretti McGough – (Employment Prep Center Coordinator.) Ed.D candidate fall 2019, Educational Leadership.
  3. Keōmailani Eaton – (STEM Outreach Coordinator) M.A. candidate fall 2019, Indigenous Studies.
  4. Keisha Nakamura – (Native Hawaiian Academic Advancement Coordinator) M.S. candidate fall 2019, Global & International Education.
  5. Keauhou Mitchell-Aldan – (Career Explorations Facilitator) M.A. candidate fall 2020, Indigenous Education.

Keauhou Mitchell-Aldan receives a warm reception from the audience.

The Symposium featured a panel discussion on maintaining work-school-life balance as scholars pursuing graduate education while working full-time at Kapiʻolani Community College. In the audience were current employees who are currently furthering their education while working full-time for the College, as well as others considering furthering their education.

Kara Plamann Wagoner, an institutional analyst and doctoral candidate in Educational Psychology at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, shared,

“I see the incredible work that the panelists of Ka Wa Mā Hope perform every day to prepare our students for success, so it was especially uplifting to see how these powerful women serve as role models in their own academic pursuits. Through the panelists’ research, I have new questions about what it means to be an analyst in an indigenous-serving institution and ideas of how I can honor our campus vision. Through the panelists’ openness, I have a fresh perspective of work-life balance as I begin to pursue my own PhD this fall. Thank you to everyone for creating such an inspiring event!”

Flyer for Symposium Ka Wā Ma Hope_ The Future is in Back of Us.

The panelists will be publishing their original scholarly contributions in a forthcoming journal focused on Native Hawaiian student success. The panelists are collaborating with Kelli Nakamura, assistant professor of history, as their professional editor for this exciting new venture.

The Symposium was funded by the University of Hawaiʻi Student Equity Excellence, and Diversity (SEED) Initiative for Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, Access and Success (IDEAS). Sara Ohashi, Title III fellowship coordinator, successfully applied for seed grant funding for the Symposium and forthcoming publication to elevate the scholarship for the featured panelists.

Grant Funds Available for Diversity Projects

Diversity-Image

The UH SEED Office is accepting applications through October 5, 2016 (Wednesday) for its semesterly competition for SEED Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, Access and Success (IDEAS) grant awards.  IDEAS Awards provides up to $5,000 for projects focused on promoting diversity, increasing access, equity, and success through activities benefitting large numbers of students.

Interested applicants are highly encouraged to contact the Office for Institutional Effectiveness to include accurate data on the number of students that are anticipated to benefit from the program.  The recommended internal deadline for Business Office review is Wednesday, September 28, 2016.

IDEAS  initiatives facilitate diversity through dimensions that address culture, race, ethnicity, national origin, sexual orientation, gender, religion and disability. It is our intention to facilitate the implementation of diversity initiatives through a variety of projects that make a concerted effort to meet the core value of the University of Hawaii system goal for diversity.

This goal states:  “Diversity, fairness, and equity: Society is best served by ensuring that all populations are represented equitably throughout the University of Hawai‘i system. Diverse perspectives contribute to the University’s commitment to root out prejudice and injustice.”

The application process will continue to be open to all eligible University of Hawaiʻi campuses throughout the state. Applications are accepted in February and October with a systemwide review committee meeting twice a year to determine awards. The review committee has awarded projects that carry out diversity measures through research, outreach and recruitment, speaker series, performance, art, trainings and workshops. The coordination and administration of SEED IDEAS is through the Office of Student Equity, Excellence and Diversity (SEED).

Click here to download the IDEAS Award application (pdf).  

Please note that applications must be reviewed and signed by the Business Office prior to submitting the 5 required hard copies to the UH SEED Office, located on UH Manoa campus.