In the past (as in, during teacher’s ed), I’ve enjoyed
these free topic blog posts because I’m constantly experiencing things that make
me think, I need to share this with the class.
I like it cus it’s fun and I get to talk about whatever I want while
still getting credit for it. These
days, I’m experiencing less of these sharable moments. I only have one in recent memory I thought I wanted
to share with the group.
This is something that happened at bowling practice one
day. I am lucky enough to be a part of a
staff that doesn’t really have a “restriction” on who we are teaching. We have three teams (varsity, JV black and JV
red). Technically my title is head JV
coach, which means my primary responsibility is the black team. The fun thing is that every one of our staff
feels free to coach everyone, we’re not limited to our “own kids”. One of these days I was watching the team as
a whole and noticed one of the bowlers (kid A) having issues so I started to
give him advice. While I was doing this,
the others were listening in and one of them (kid B) started chiming his own
two cents. Mind you kid B has had a
total of 3 months of bowling experience under his belt, so, even though I liked
the fact that they’re collaborating and helping each other, I was quick to
point out that one of us has more experience and should probably listen to me
(since the two cents kid B offered was completely wrong). The rest of the conversation went like this:
Kid A: But Panda, he’s my Tutu
Me: …he’s your grandmother?
Kid A: No, no…what’s teacher?
Me: Kumu.
Kid A: Oh yeah, that.
Kid B: …I thought that was humu?
Me: That’s a fish…and not even its full name.
Kid B: Oh yeah…
First I thought, that’s hilarious. Second I thought, wow, these kids have almost
no useable Hawaiian knowledge. Is that
what we were talking about this whole time, how a lot of students have zero
real connection to the place they’re from when they go through their schooling
career? It made me kinda sad, that these
are the kind of people who spread their limited and incorrect local knowledge
to the rest of the world. Probably why
we as local people watched the re-made Hawai’i Five-0 for a little while,
laughed at all the mistakes and fake pidgin accents then stopped watching cus
it ended up irritating us (my experience).
I mean, recently I was reading an article in Guns & Ammo about a hunting trip the writer took to Maui. He wrote about his fondness for the “authentic”
luau he attended at some touristy establishment and how they slow roast pigs in
underground pits. He couldn’t even write
imu, although it’s probably best he didn’t because his next statement was that
while he was searching possible hunts to take while in the islands he’d found a
guide to take him on a pua hunt. I sat there thinking to myself, …you’re going
flower hunting?
These two occurrences merged into one when I came to a
thought about the importance of place-based or cultural-based learning we’re
experiencing in this program. Yes, this
style of learning is largely beneficial to someone like me or to the others in
our program and to many of the future students we’ll have as educators. But that very thought of, “These kids are
going to go to school in the mainland after high school and spout off so many
inaccurate statements about being “Hawaiian” made me wonder about the goals of
certain students’ education. The students
I’m in contact with attend a college prep school, the goal of their education
being preparing them for college. A lot
of students to end up going to UH: Mānoa, like I did, but for the majority of
the class, the next level of education happens at some other school on the
continental United States. I’m going to
irritate people when I say, this stuff we’re learning is important but I can see
why for some people they just won’t care because it’s not the goal of their
education. The goal of some people is to
not be members of the culture we have here in this place. Personally, I value the place/cultural-based
education facet of learning. Being from
this place, I wanted to know more about the culture and history of Hawai’i. I took the Hawaiian history and culture
classes offered at ‘Iolani. I took a
year of Hawaiian language at UH for fun, even though I’m awful at learning
languages and my degree had zero language requirements. I bought and read books about Hawaiian
mythology, even though I hate reading. It’s
important and interesting for me because I’m from here, I’m a part of this
place. Knowing more enlightens my being
here and allows me to see things from various perspectives. That’s just me, everyone’s different;
apparently, especially people from the same school as me.
Hey Panda,
ReplyDeleteI found your blog to be very amusing. I think you brought up a really interesting point about our Hawaii kids going off to the mainland and repping the culture incorrectly. I have firsthand experience with that up in Oregon where Hawaii kids would alwasy try to act a little extra "local" to prove to everyone else they were from Hawaii. It really is a dangerous game we're playing if we allow our students to leave Hawaii feeling like they know the culture but disseminating it incorrectly.
One great example of this was our annual "luau" that Hawaii club throws every year at Univ of Oregon. This luau took all year to plan cuz we tried to fundraise over $30,000 to have catered food shipped up from Hawaii, local reggae bands shipped up and we would spend months practicing hula (which was taught by unqualified students). In the end it was this big stressful, crazy glamorous show that evryone looked forward to.
But we were missing the point. When I suggested the next year to throw our luau outside under some tents, and get a free band to play, and have an uncle cook all the food, I was shot down. Everyone said I was ruining tradition. Tradition? Tradition? Since when is it Hawaiian tradition to spend 30k on a luau? Every luau I ever been to has been backyard bbq style under some pop up tents.
This is how traditions become colonized and disenfranchised. Very good point sir.
Hi Panda! I loved your post. Thanks for sharing the bowlers story and then following up with your perspective on it, how you see it now that you have been "STEMS^2 ized" I have had so many experiences like that, looking at the world through a different lens these days for sure! Like watching my kids make sand castles on the beach leaves me with all these deep thoughts about sense of place, insideness etc...
ReplyDeleteOn another note, I started off quarter 2 giving my students a map of the Hawaiian Islands to try and label it and label the channels. I had them then look up the meanings of the channel names. Was really cool..
Aloha, Nicole