MEDIA RELEASE
School garden teachers, classroom teachers, administrators, staff, volunteers, and interested community members from around the state may register now for the annual Hawaii Island School Garden Network (HISGN) summer symposium in June on Hawaii Island.
The symposium, “School Learning Gardens and Sustainability Education: Bringing Schools to Life and Life to Schools,†is June 7–8 in Kamuela at the Gates Performing Arts Center at Hawaii Preparatory Academy and Malaai: The Culinary Garden of Waimea Middle School.
Symposium registration is from 7:30–8:30 a.m. Friday, June 7. Friday’s keynote address will be followed by 15 breakout sessions and a Hawaii Farm to School and School Garden Hui panel discussion with representatives from each island. Friday evening will feature the West Hawaii premiere of the documentary Na Kupu Mana‘olana – Seeds of Hope, Danny Miller’s new film on Hawaii’s agricultural history and promise.
The agenda for Saturday, June 8, includes a presentation by Pomai Bertelmann, followed by tours of up to six school gardens in the Kamuela area, and concludes with a garden luncheon at Malaai with Slow Food Hawaii.
Symposium registration is $50 per person and includes conference materials and breakfast and lunch on both days. Registration and payment are due by June 5.
To register, call 887-6411 or visit: www.higardensymposium.eventbrite.com
The Kokua Hawaii Foundation has funded 30 Teacher Travel Scholarships for registrants traveling from other islands. The scholarships are $200 each and will be made payable to the registrant’s school.
Download the application at www.kohalacenter.org/HISGN/symposium13.html and follow the submission instructions.
This year’s keynote speaker, Dilafruz Williams, is a professor of educational leadership and policy at Portland State University. She has studied the effects of ecological education on academic achievement and social skills acquisition for more than 20 years.
Williams also served as chair of the board of the Council of Great City Schools, comprising 66 of the nation’s largest school districts. She has distinguished herself in sustainability education, environmental education, learning gardens, garden-based education research, K-12 leadership and policy, diversity, social justice, service-learning, and community-university-school strategic partnerships.
Williams will also be serving as a mentor for the second cohort of Ku Aina Pa, the new school learning garden teacher training program for Hawaii’s teachers.
Symposium participants may order William’s book, School Learning Gardens and Sustainability Education: Bringing Life to Schools and Schools to Life, at a discount when they register for the event.
The first cohort of Ku Aina Pa will present their year-long action research projects at the symposium. The class of 26 teachers from Hawaii Island has been working individually and together to deepen their knowledge and skills in the art of teaching in school learning gardens.
The cohort will present on subjects that integrate core curriculum and learning in the outdoor school garden classroom. Ku Aina Pa was created under a USDA/SPECA “Ag in the Classroom K-12†grant to HISGN.
HISGN is a program of The Kohala Center. The goal of HISGN is to help island schools build gardening and agricultural programs that will significantly contribute to the increased consumption of locally produced food by involving students, their school communities, and their family networks in food production.
The Kohala Center is an independent, community-based center for research, education, and conservation. The Center was established in direct response to the request of island residents to create greater educational and employment opportunities by enhancing — and celebrating — Hawaii’s spectacular natural and cultural landscapes.
— Find out more:
www.kohalacenter.org
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