NHEP “All Together Now” grant lessons
Alia Thompson, Kaimukī Middle School, [email protected]
Euvelyn Calma, Nānākuli High School, [email protected]
Presenting portions from:Oceanic Circulation, ʻŌlelo Noʻeau, & Moʻoleloand Introduction to Plankton
“All Together Now: A Model Partnership for Improving Hawaiian Middle School Education.”
Museum partnership with the UHCOE and the PVS
Create a series of educational experiences for Native Hawaiian middle school audiences
Combine western science with relevant cultural knowledge and practice.
Made possible by
• Bishop Museum• Native Hawaiian Education Program• UHCOE• CMORE• NSF• PVS
My background
• UHM- Botany degree, focus Hawaiian ethnobotany• UHM- Post-bacc Teaching Certificate, focus
Secondary Science Education• UHM- Master’s degree, Curriculum studies, focus
Hawaiian Science• 3rd year teacher Kaimuki Middle School 7th grade
life science • Other grants and projects: MBARI, CDEBI, CMORE,
IfA
Format and Framework
The 5 E Learning Cycle ModelHawaiian Style Perspective: Past, present, future
and Local, regional, global
http://faculty.mwsu.edu/west/maryann.coe/coe/inquire/inquiry.htm
Oceanic Circulation, ʻŌlelo Noʻeau, & Moʻolelo
Lessons to Engage, Explain and Elaborate
Alia Thompson, Kaimukī Middle School, [email protected]
Euvelyn Calma, Nānākuli High School, [email protected]
ʻĀnela Benson, Maui Waena Intermediate School, [email protected]
Summary and GoalFocus students’ previous personal knowledge of
and experience with ocean currents Integrate it with ʻike kūpuna (ancestor
knowledge), through ʻōlelo noʻeau (wise sayings) and moʻolelo (legends)
Scientific depictions of oceanographic
Connections to Voyaging
http://fys.kuleuven.be/pradem/demoproeven/prf100a.html
Connections to Culture
Analyze Kalae Current ʻŌlelo noʻeau Look for clues:
DirectionSpeedCharacterLocationGeologyOthers?
http://familytravel.everything-everywhere.com/2012/08/southpoint-hawaii/
# 1819: Kō ke au ia Halaʻea. The current carried Halaʻea away. (Said of one who goes out and forgets to return. Haleʻea was a chief of Kaʻū who was so selfish that he demanded every fish caught by the fishermen. After years of going without fish, the fishermen rebelled. One day, the whole fleet went to the fishing grounds outside of Kalae and did not return. The chief wanted the catch and ordered a servant to go and ask for it. The servant refused, and in anger the chief went himself. When he asked for the fish the whole fleet turned the prows of their canoes shoreward. One by one the fishermen unloaded their fish onto the chief’s canoe. The canoe began to sink under the weight of the fish, and the chief cried out to the men to stop. They refused. The chief, his canoe, and his fish were swept out on the current and never seen again. This current, which comes from the east and flows out to sea at Kalae, is known as Ke au o Halaʻea.) (p. 196)
# 2225: Na kai haele lua o Kalae, o Kāwili lāua o Halaʻea. The two sea currents of Kalae—Kāwili and Halaʻea. (The Halaʻea current, named for an evil chief who was swept away, comes from the east to Kalae and sweeps out to sea. The Kāwili (Hit-and-Twist) comes from the west and flows out alongside the Halaʻea. Woe betide anyone caught between.) (p. 243)
Kalae Today Do you see the same things?
http://www.slideshare.net/malama777/na-lae
Make Observations using real to near real time data
LocalRegional
Global
Average surface currents
http://oos.soest.hawaii.edu/pacioos/outreach/oceanatlas/currents.php
(Irwin, 2006, p. 71)
http://www.starfish.ch/reef/ocean.htm
Write Own ʻŌlelo and ShareSustainability of Knowledge
Introduction to Plankton
Lessons to Elaborate
Alia Thompson, Kaimukī Middle School, [email protected]
Euvelyn Calma, Nānākuli High School, [email protected]
Summary and Goals
Students study how global climate change is affecting plankton
Students identify specific topics to enhance their understanding of plankton adaptations in order to explain how they survive within ocean currents.
Students collect, compare and share data
Connections to Voyaging
Background Resources on Plankton
Prodigal plankton species makes first known migration from Pacific to Atlantic via Pole
“Microscopic plant disappeared from North Atlantic 800,000 years ago; unwanted return 1 of several climate change symptoms already apparent throughout European oceans”
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-06/fmi-pps062011.php
Plankton kit-Intro to plankton CMORE
Plankton collection procedure CMORE
Collect and identify key stone species
Compare
Make zoogeographic Map
http://www.whoi.edu/news-release/planktonatlas
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:World_plankton_prevailence.PNG
Sharing the DataFree Resources:
WebsiteGoogle maps and spreadsheet
http://ahupuaaopalolo.weebly.com
Implications for WWVHikianalia collect samples
report on key stone species
Students compare to their own
Questions, Comments, Concerns?