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Relocating UH College of Education away from Manoa highly impractical

Donald B. Young, left, is dean of the College of Education and Robert Bley-Vroman is chancellor of the University of Hawaii-Manoa.

There has been much discussion about the surprise “proviso” in the state budget inserted in the final days of the 2016 Legislature, without any public hearings, by which the Legislature tried to force the relocation of the University of Hawaii-Manoa’s College of Education (COE).

Not only is this impractical, it would be extremely difficult, if not impossible.

Since the Territorial Normal and Training School was transferred to UH in 1931 creating COE, the fourth college of the University of Hawaii, it has evolved as a complex institution preparing future teachers, educational leaders and researchers.

It serves all islands and all areas, including West Oahu, and is consistently ranked among the top 100 Best Graduate Schools of Education in the nation (66th in 2016) by U.S. News &World Report.

As an additional indicator of quality, all programs are nationally accredited with no conditions.

While the COE continues to prepare the bulk of the state’s teachers, it is also the only state institution that prepares educational leaders and educa- tional researchers at all levels, preschool through higher education.

Of its nearly 2000 students, 54 percent are undergraduates, 46 percent are in graduate programs; 35 percent are in programs leading to teacher licensure and 37 percent are in leadership development programs in one of eight master or four doctoral programs.

In addition, over 500 undergraduate students are in the Kinesiology and Rehabilitation Science (KRS) bachelor’s degree program in Health and Exercise Science preparing athletic trainers and physical therapists that require the sophisticated facilities and equipment shared with athletics. KRS faculty also provide many of the required physical education courses and intramural offerings at Manoa and account for many of the over 3,000 students who registered for COE classes in spring 2016.

These programs can only function in a flagship institution where students have access to researchers and faculty in nearly all of the numerous colleges and schools available at UH-Manoa.

Even more to this point, COE students are required to take many courses that are only available on the Manoa campus.

It is also important to note that COE faculty came with the understanding they would be teaching at a major four-year research institution. Their salaries were agreed to based on this agreement. Many are involved in teaching and mentoring over 750 graduate students.

On the research side, the only research in special education in the state is conducted by COE faculty; the Curriculum Research &Development Group is the only K–12 curriculum development unit in Hawaii; the Center on Disability Studies is the only unit in Hawaii conducting research and training for those with disabilities and COE generates approximately $20 million in research/training contracts and grants annually.

COE graduates can be found in all of the public schools across the state and in many private schools as well. Our doctoral students are leaders in education across the state and the Pacific region.

To prepare great teachers and leaders, you need a respected, professional college.

We already have one, and to ensure its continued success, it must remain part of UH-Manoa.

9 responses to “Relocating UH College of Education away from Manoa highly impractical”

  1. manakuke says:

    Not a real good idea especially for a public university.

  2. Bdpapa says:

    The College of Education needs to stay in Manoa. Have Students go to West Oahu or the Community Colleges until they can enter the college of Education.

  3. kaimuki21 says:

    Having heard about the overcrowding at high schools in West Oahu, ie Campbell HS, has anyone thought to use the UH west oahu campus as a high school campus. West Oahu isn’t growing or graduating many students ie. so ideas like moving the COE come up to increase enrollment making no sense. Maybe the better way is to close the facility as a UH campus and have a ready made high school for the area.

    • Bothrops says:

      Interesting thinking outside the box. No one really knows why WO was built except as rail bait and at the insistence of the landowner. What does it do for education?

      And what genius in the Leg thought up trying to black mail UH, telling it that it would only get money to demolish a building if it moved an entire school to West Oahu?

  4. btom says:

    COE should take over the University Lab School(ULS) campus where a few of the COE departments are already located. Since ULS is a charter school and is no longer under the COE a move from the current location to WO may be a way to open up more room on the ULS campus to the COE. There is already a building on the ULS campus that is condemned and others that are in poor condition. This move maybe a win/win situation for both the COE and ULS.

  5. CriticalReader says:

    Move UH Manoa to the Ewa plain and sell off the Manoa campus in increments to pay for both development of an Ewa campus, as well as to provide a better operating endowment.

  6. Speakup says:

    The physical facilities at UHM are crumbling! Why woulldn’t anyone want to move to a nice spanking new campus? The COE would be UHM in name. The physical facilites would just be a bit better! Why put more money down a crumbling hole? Now that BV is in his fancy quarters in Hawaii Hall has he forgotten the decrepid portable type of building in which the Dean’s office was located? Legislators need to tell these people what to do! They don’t know how to think! It would be a good idea to slowly start shifting the campus out West! It is too far gone to repair! Library books keep getting soaked! Students complain of bed bugs in library chairs! All that the administrators care about is their own conveniences! They don’t want to be inconvenienced driving or commuting out West!

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