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Friday, October 26, 2018

Posted 10-26-2018 (Dated 10-26-2018) State, district teachers of the year announced; Gov, superintendent pledge to increase school funds, salaries; Who to vote for, where to sign wave!

DOE names state, district teachers of the year


Congratulations to Mathieu Williams, the multimedia teacher at Kealakehe Intermediate School on Hawaii Island, who was named the Department of Education's Teacher of the Year at a ceremony at Washington Place Friday afternoon.

Above: Mathieu Williams (center with many lei around his neck) posed with the schools superintendent, the governor and his wife along with other DOE officials.

Mahalo and job well done to all the district teachers of the year from across the state, who are pictured below. We appreciate that so many educators consistently go above and beyond for their students and the community.



District Teachers of the Year:
Honolulu District: Samuel Hankins, Kawananakoa Middle
Central District: Mary Ann Kurose, Radford High
Leeward District: Gail Izumigawa, Waipahu High
Windward District: Deborah Morrow, Kailua Elementary
Maui District: Brandon Arakawa, Kahului Elementary
Kauai District: Sean Doi, Kauai Complex Area
Public Charter School: Shane Albritton, School for Examining Essential Questions of Sustainability

Find photos of all the honorees in this photo album of the award event.

Con Am illuminated school funding crisis 

 

Gov, schools superintendent call for more school resources, better pay


Even though the state Supreme Court blocked voters from deciding on the constitutional amendment to better fund our schools, the HSTA’s Con Am campaign helped focus attention on chronic public school underfunding, low teacher pay and the negative consequences those problems have on students.
“The constitutional amendment started a great conversation about how do we improve public schools in Hawaii,” said HSTA President Corey Rosenlee at a news conference Monday. “While HSTA is disappointed in the Supreme Court decision, we must continue this conversation, and the conversation must lead to results. The stakes are too high.”
The HSTA organized the Oct. 22 news conference at McKinley High on Oahu that was attended by Gov. David Ige, Board of Education Chair Catherine Payne, State Schools Superintendent Christina Kishimoto, State Sen. Michelle Kidani, community education activists, supporters and public school teachers. The HSTA invited leaders of the anti Con Am group called the Affordable Hawaii Coalition, but they declined to attend, holding their own separate news conference later in the day Monday.

Read a detailed article from HSTA.org about the news conference in which the schools superintendent talks about the need for higher teacher salaries and the governor commits to fighting for more school resources.


Watch video highlights from HSTA's news conference with the governor and other state leaders here.

Read this fascinating column from Civil Beat about how the Con Am language morphed from what HSTA originally fought for (clear, specific language targeting second homes worth more than $1million) into a vague proposal that opponents were able to use to scare voters.

Teachers across the state showed their support for better school funding Oct. 24



Above: Palolo Elementary on Oahu.
Below: Kalanianaole Elem and Middle on Hawaii Island.



Mahalo to the teachers and community members stood together outside their schools to sign wave to rally for better school funding Wednesday, only days after the state Supreme Court invalidated the constitutional amendment.

Click here to see photos sent in from teachers on Oct. 24.
Everyone knows that voting is important, but sometimes we have a hard time figuring out who to vote for. Not to worry! When you click the link below, you'll be asked to enter your address or city and within seconds you'll see HSTA-recommended candidates who support public education in your area.
Be sure to vote in the general election on Tuesday, Nov. 6!
Click here! (Then share the link with family and friends who might need help deciding who to vote for.)

Want to sign wave and support HSTA-recommended candidates? Check out this political action schedule!

Vote for your fellow teachers!


Amy Perruso and Micah Pregitzer -- two longtime Hawaii public school teachers -- are running for Hawaii's State House, and are among the 1,500 teachers across the country mounting campaigns for elected office in November's elections.

Read about the record number of teachers running for office nationwide this year.

Learn more about Micah Pregitzer (D), who's running to represent House District 50, Kailua and Kaneohe Bay on Oahu, by clicking here for his campaign Facebook page or watching the following short video.

Click here to watch the video

Learn more about Amy Perruso (D), who is campaigning to represent state House of Representatives District 46, which covers Wahiawa, Whitmore Village and Launani Valley at her campaign website or by watching this brief video.

Click here to watch the video
 

Teachers win prize packs for answering GR, negotiations surveys



Mahalo to the more than 1,000 teachers across the state who took time to complete two important surveys about HSTA's government relations priorities and negotiations/contract issues. Congratulations to the following ten HSTA members who won a reusable red bag full of teacher tools for participating in our surveys.

The randomly selected winners are:
  • Alicia Jacobson, Maui Chapter, Haiku Elementary
  • Abel Maldonado, Hilo Chapter, Waikeawaena Elementary
  • Felicia Villalobos, Kauai Chapter, Wilcox Elementary
  • John Lander, Maui Chapter, Maui Waena Intermediate
  • Leslie Stewart, Windward Chapter, Kahuku High and Intermediate
  • Alika Masei, Leeward Chapter, Waianae Intermediate
  • Ashlie Johnson, Leeward Chapter, Makakilo Elementary
  • Michele Costa-Rocha, Hilo Chapter, Kalanianaole Elementary/Intermediate
  • Jason Jestice, Leeward Chapter, Waipahu High
  • Shelley Lau, Honolulu Chapter, Aina Haina Elementary 

HSTA supports diversity, striking hotel workers

 

Members of HSTA's Human and Civil Rights Committee -- dressed in colorful tie-dye t-shirts -- marched down Kalakaua Avenue Saturday morning in the Honolulu Pride Parade, to celebrate diversity and support members of the LGBTQ community. HSTA's Board of Directors also participated in the parade and then joined other unions in supporting members of Local 5, the hotel workers who are out on strike against several large hotels. HSTA board members attended a solidarity rally for the hotel workers Saturday morning in front of the Princess Kaiulani Hotel in Waikiki.



New Spring 2019 HSTA PD course offered


Signing up for HSTA PD courses is as easy as 1, 2, 3:
  1. Go pde3.k12.hi.us (PDE3) and add yourself to the wait-list for a specific section of a course
  2. Next, go to www.pd.hsta.org and make payment for that specific course section
  3. Lastly, once payment is received, HSTA will move you from the  “Wait-List” to “Registered” on PDE3 and your enrollment will be confirmed via email
K-6 Foundations of Number Sense- Hybrid
PDE3 Section #MA184074 
Dates: January 10 - June 6, 2019
Click here for course on HSTA PD site
This 3-PD Credit Course is designed as an introductory course to support educators in teaching number sense using strategies and philosophies used in Singapore. Give students a deeper understanding of numbers, setting them up for current and future success as mathematical thinkers. Learn how to build foundational number sense not through memorization of rules and facts, but through a clear understanding of numbers, their magnitude, and their relationships with other numbers. Learn new methods for building number sense and teaching computation in ways that make sense to both you and your students in alignment with the Common Core State Standards. With this solid foundation, you will prepare them to develop higher-level math skills and reasoning ability for years to come. 

This section will meet on Oahu at HSTA, 1200 Ala Kapuna Street, Honolulu, HI 96819,  from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on the following dates: January 10, February 16, and March 2.  Online work will be required as part of this course.  The deadline to pay for this course is December 31, 2018.  Only HSTA Members are eligible.
 

Please vote for these 3 Hawaii teachers daily until Oct. 31!


This year, three Hawaii teachers have the chance to win $100,000 through the Farmers Insurance Dream Big Teacher Challenge!

The three Hawaii finalists are:
    

Leimamo Lind-Strauss – Ho‘okena Elementary School, Captain Cook, HI
Ryan Chatfield – Aiea High School, Aiea, HI
Zachary Morita – Niu Valley Middle School, Honolulu, HI

Your votes have the power to make these Hawaii teachers’ dreams come true! They need your votes to win $100,000 for their classrooms and students.

The voting period is open from October 1 to October 31.  Please support and vote for the three Hawaii teachers to help make their dreams come true. Click on the link here to vote. and vote every day until October 31 for each of the three Hawaii teachers. Give these teachers the chance to fund their educational visions.





HSTA membership ID cards look like this




Your new membership cards should have arrived in your home mailbox recently. The cards include your name, your HSTA and NEA membership number and the year you originally became a member. Use these cards for discounts and specials that require an HSTA membership card. And use the membership number to register for our new website.
 

             

             
Degrees Not Debt - student loan forgiveness seminars on Maui, online (Oahu)

Maui
November 15
4-6 p.m.
Baldwin High Multipurpose Room


Oahu and Virtually
November 16
4 – 5:30 p.m. (in-person check in starts at 3:30 p.m.)
HSTA Office and virtually

The latest NEA Member Benefit research shows that recent graduates are leaving schools with greater debt. This presentation focuses on how teachers who teach in "high impact schools" can get a portion of their federal loans forgiven. In addition, we will cover the basics of the Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program, which applies to all full-time HSTA members who have federal loans.

Basic financial planning tips on how to live with debt, save for retirement despite paying off debt and the importance of having a financial plan will also be covered.

Please RSVP by November 10:
Maui (November 15, 2018):  https://mauidegreesnotdebt.eventbrite.com
Oahu and Virtually (November 16, 2018): https://dndnov16.eventbrite.com

Communications specialist position open


The HSTA is looking for a communications specialist to join its team that communicates with members and the public. The person hired for the post will be responsible for gathering and writing web stories, oversight of HSTA's social media channels and its weekly Member Matters e-newsletter as well as media relations. Experience working in daily news media and/or familiarity with Hawaii news organizations and reporters is strongly preferred.

The communications specialist will report to HSTA Director of Communications Keoki Kerr and work in the Communications Department, which includes HSTA Media Specialist Chris Schubert.

Read the position description and apply by Nov. 12.

Mark your calendar for Teacher Institute Day 


Teacher Institute Day began in the 1960s as a day for teachers to meet and work on school-related issues. In 1972, HSTA negotiated this important time into the contract to guard against it being taken away.  In the early years, the Association used Teacher Institute Day to inform teachers about negotiations, lobbying, political action and grievance processing.  As time progressed, HSTA introduced workshops to help teachers with their jobs and personal concerns such as retirement and health care. Teacher Institute Day is the single largest professional development day on the school calendar, covering a variety of topics – for professional and personal growth – and featuring noteworthy keynote speakers. 

In 2017, the focus of Institute Day was to inform teachers about negotiations and their contract.  Thousands of teachers united and rallied and made their voices heard at the State Capitol. As a result of strong collective action across the state that spring, the HSTA negotiated a nearly 14 percent pay hike over four years.

As a professional day, it is a workday and teacher attendance is expected.

Here are the dates by island:
               Monday, Feb. 11, 2019, Oahu             
               Tuesday, Feb. 12, 2019, Hawaii Island     
               Wednesday, Feb. 13, 2019, Kauai             
               Thursday, Feb. 14, 2019, Molokai      
               Friday, Feb. 15, 2019, Maui and Lanai        
 
Popular HSTA Links:

DOE's 2018-2019 official school calendar

DOE's 2019-2020 official school calendar

DOE's 2020-2021 official school calendar

Classroom visit memo

Please see this UPDATED MARCH 2018 chart for the EUTF and HSTA VB Health Benefit Premium Rates effective July 1, 2018.

Hawaii Teacher Standards Board Read HTSB reminders here.

Read the full story about pay hikes, supplemental pay and stipends available for teachers.

Click here to look at the salary schedules.

HSTA members can find a PDF searchable copy of the new 2017-2021 HSTA Collective Bargaining Agreement (contract) at this link.

More information about the 21 hours of job-embedded professional development can be found in these DOE FAQs.

Guidelines for Reclassification of Teachers

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