1 / 22

Building an Ohana Learning Center at Palolo Valley Homes

Building an Ohana Learning Center at Palolo Valley Homes. Dahlia Asuega, Resident Services Manager, Mutual Housing-Palolo Valley Homes Dr. Robert Franco, Professor, Director of Planning, Grants, Civic Engagement Kapiolani Community College Campus Compact, Senior Faculty Fellow

ahanu
Télécharger la présentation

Building an Ohana Learning Center at Palolo Valley Homes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Building an Ohana Learning Center at Palolo Valley Homes Dahlia Asuega, Resident Services Manager, Mutual Housing-Palolo Valley Homes Dr. Robert Franco, Professor, Director of Planning, Grants, Civic Engagement Kapiolani Community College Campus Compact, Senior Faculty Fellow ww.compact.org

  2. Presentation Frame - Palolo • Dahlia Asuega • Palolo Homes 1995-2007 • Profile of the Palolo Homes Community, 2007 • Programs and Services in the New Ohana Learning Center

  3. Presentation Frame-Kapi’olani • Bob Franco • David Nakamura – Funds Leveraging • Partnership Development – Palolo Pipeline • Funds Leveraging • Institutional Perspective – Service-Learning, Civic Responsibility, Civic Engagement

  4. Palolo Valley Homes 1995-2007 • President of Palolo Homes Tenants Association • Led statewide effort to empower public housing residents – “Island Tenants on the Rise” • Started the “Palolo Pride Celebration”

  5. Palolo Valley Homes 1995-2007 • 306 units purchased by Mutual Housing Association of Hawaii in 2002. • Hired as Resident Services Manager in 2002. • All units renovated successfully over a 12 month period. • Technology Center – “The Hale” developed from 1999-2007. Lead Role of Judith Kirkpatrick, KCC Professor.

  6. Palolo Valley Homes – 2007 Profile • Number of Households 306 • Number of Residents 1,087 • Ethnicity • Asian Americans N=511 (47%) • Hawaiian-Samoan-Tongan-Micronesian N=413 (38%) • African American, Caucasian, Hispanic, Other N=163 (15%)

  7. Palolo Valley Homes - Profile • Age • Under 18 N= 407 (37.4%) • 18-55 N=493 (45.4%) • Over 55 N=187 (17.2%)

  8. Palolo Valley Homes - Profile • Educational Level of Those Currently in School • Palolo Elementary School 205 • Jarrett Middle School 202 • Kaimuki High School 118 • Colleges 52

  9. Palolo Valley Homes - Profile • Employed 41.2 percent • Unemployed 58.8 percent • Average Household Income $2,150 • Percent Below 50% of Median Income 88.0% • Crime Rate low over last 5 years, relations with Honolulu Police positive.

  10. Palolo Valley Homes - Profile • Education Partners • Kapi’olani Community College (lead) • University of Hawaii, Manoa (UHM) • Chaminade University of Honolulu (CUH)

  11. Palolo Valley Homes - Profile • Community-based Partners • Head Start • Palolo Elementary • Jarrett Middle School • Kaimuki High School

  12. Palolo Valley Homes - Profile • Community-Based Partners • Honololu Community Action Program • Diamond Head Health Center • Palolo and Manoa Lions • East Honolulu Rotary • Kaimuki Business and Professionals Association • Eight Faith-based Organizations

  13. Palolo Valley Homes - Profile • Ohana Learning Center • Located on second floor of Palolo Valley Homes Administration Center. • Size = 5,850 Square Feet • Projected completion date – October 2008

  14. Ohana Learning Center:Programs and Services • Early Literacy • Computer Literacy • Nurse Aide for Long-Term Care • Teacher Aide Training • Micro-Business Development • Public Health Nursing Station • College and Career Prep Services

  15. Ohana Learning Center:Programs and Services • Exercise and Sports Science • Long-term Care Service • Mini-Kinkos • Culinary Education • New Media Arts and Music Room • November 2007 – October 2008 • Collaborative Planning Process Between Palolo Residents, Management, and Kapi’olani CC

  16. Funds Leveraging • David Nakamura – Executive Director, Mutual Housing Association of Hawaii, Inc. • Raised approximately $1 million dollars from HUD-CDBG, NeighborWorks, State Farm Insurance, others. • Builds on a 12 year partnership called the “Palolo Pipeline” since 2003.

  17. Palolo Pipeline • See Green Handout • Funds Leveraging • Kellogg Capturing the Momentum P-3 $100,000 per year through 2010 • AmeriCorps positions at Palolo Homes and schools. Educational Awards or Cash. • CNCS - $25,000 per year through 2009

  18. Institutional Perspective • Service-Learning • Civic Responsibility as a student learning outcome • See Service-Learning Fact Sheet • Civic Engagement as an Institutional Effectiveness Outcome

  19. Institutional Perspective:Kapi’olani Values • Aloha for Hawai‘i, and its diverse peoples, cultures, languages, and environments. • Service and attention to the needs of our diverse students and their experiences, contributions, expectations, and dreams.

  20. Institutional Perspective:Kapi’olani Values • Collaboration and partnerships in working for the social, economic, and environmental betterment of the communities we serve.

  21. Institutional Perspective:Kapi’olani Mission • Prepares students for lives of ethical, responsible community involvement by offering opportunities for increased civic engagement.

  22. A New Ecology of Learning Cyberspace (web, cellphones, podcasts, facebook, myspace) Study Abroad Community Campus (Co-curricular) Classroom

More Related