Hi‘ilei provides educational home-visits where parents meet regularly with a Parents As Teachers certified educator to learn about early childhood development and gain the skills needed to be their child’s first and best teacher.
Ho‘āla conducts outreach that provides families with information on the importance of early childhood education and helps them navigate systems to secure early learning opportunities for their child.
Keiki Steps is a Hawaiian culture-based family-child interactive learning preschool where parents and children, from newborn to age 5, learn together to ensure academic success and prepare keiki for Kindergarten.
Empowering
Early
Learning
Ka Lama Education Academy supports community members in their pursuit to become high-quality teachers in their home communities through college support, mentorship and professional training.
Kaulele seeks to create informal STEM learning opportunities through indigenous Hawaiian knowledge that connects modern and traditional science to help young learners engage, connect to and succeed in STEM academics and occupations.
Kupu Ola collaborates with schools to create alternative learning approaches that focus on strengthening academic and personal confidence in youth through the integration of Native Hawaiian culture in outdoor classrooms and interactive learning activities.
Early Literacy collaborates with community early childcare services and preschools, providing professional development, educational materials, coaching, and support for the delivery of an evidence-based literacy intervention.
Empowering
Educational
Equity
Ho‘oulu Waiwai works with families to strengthen financial well-being though partnerships, pathways and learning experiences that nurture personal financial wellness and entrepreneurial development.
The INPEACE Center for Entrepreneurship supports new family-owned business start-ups on the Leeward Coast of O‘ahu to increase their capacity to succeed.
Empowering
Economic
Stability
Quality Learning for Keiki Everywhere
Early Literacy collaborates with community early childcare services and preschools, providing professional development, educational materials, coaching, and support for the delivery of an evidence-based literacy intervention. The program’s goal is to reach keiki where they are at, regardless of which early learning resource families choose to place their child, ensuring that every child has access to quality education.
Culture-based instruction has the potential for narrowing educational achievement gaps. It allows keiki to build relationships and engage in learning that is tied to community and establishes a deeper sense of self, building pride in who they are, and where they’re from.
A New Curriculum
Utilizing the practices and approaches of Doors to Discover, an evidence-based curriculum, a new curriculum framework has been developed that integrates culturally relevant activities and materials that fit the needs of the keiki in our communities.
Strengthening our community for the future means ensuring that our keiki today have the best educational opportunities to grow and thrive. For INPEACE, this means reaching beyond ourselves and ensuring that all early learning providers have the skills, tools, and resources they need to provide the best instruction possible. With our continual focus on strengthening community through collaborative efforts, the Early Literacy Program engages parents, family home childcare providers, Family-Child Interactive Learning programs, and center-based preschools to increase the level and quality of literacy intervention for the keiki in their care.
The project provides culturally responsive, high-quality instruction that focuses on the whole-child, and addresses all 12 elements of a comprehensive literacy instruction plan as defined by the USDOE. The evidence-based program, Doors to Discovery (D2D), uses thematic units of literacy activities to encourage children’s development in oral language, phonological awareness, print concepts, alphabet knowledge, writing, and comprehension, and has been adapted to be delivered through a culturally appropriate lens. The focus of the curriculum is the development of children’s vocabulary and expressive and receptive language through a learning process called “shared literacy,” by which adults and children work together to develop literacy related skills.
Germaine Tauati
Program Director
Chantal Richie
Early Literacy Coach
Franconia Arline
Project Activities Coordinator
INPEACE is a nonprofit organization that relies heavily on grants to fund programs and services that strengthen, support, educate and empower our communities. Through donations, we are able to keep our programs free while providing an incredible asset to our community.
The mission of INPEACE is to improve the quality of life for Native Hawaiians through community partnerships that provide educational opportunities and promote self-sufficiency.
INPEACE, the Institute for Native Pacific Education and Culture, is 501(c) Community-Based Organization.
Your gift is tax deductible as provided by law.
Our Federal Tax ID# 99-0315193.
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