• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Chaminade University of Honolulu

Chaminade University of Honolulu

  • VISIT
  • APPLY
  • GIVE
  • STUDENTS
  • PARENTS
  • ALUMNI
  • FACULTY/STAFF
  • Admissions
    • Admissions Home
    • Undergraduate Students
      • First-Year Students
      • Transfer Students
      • Admitted Students
    • Graduate Students
    • Flex Online Undergraduate Program
    • Military Students
    • Non-Degree/Visiting Students
    • Experiential Honors Program
    • Early College Program
    • New Student Orientation
  • Tuition & Aid
    • Financial Aid Home
    • Tuition & Expenses
    • Federal Updates & Changes
    • Scholarships
    • $5,000 Graduate Scholarship
    • VA Education Benefits
    • Net Price Calculator
  • Academics
    • Academics Home
    • Academic Programs
    • Office of Student Success
      • Academic Advising
      • Records and Registrar
    • Kōkua ʻIke (Support Services)
      • ADA Accommodations
      • Career Services
      • Proctoring Services
      • Tutoring Services
    • Sullivan Family Library
    • Undergraduate Research & Pre-Professional Programs
    • Commencement
  • Campus Life
    • About Campus Life
    • Student Engagement
    • Student Government Association
    • Residence Life and Housing
      • Summer Conference Housing
    • Health Services
    • Marianist Leadership Center
    • Counseling Center
    • Campus Ministry
    • Campus Security
    • Dining Services
    • Bookstore
  • Athletics
  • About
    • Chaminade University News
    • Our Story
    • Leadership
    • Chaminade University Strategic Plan 2024-2030
    • Mission & Rector
    • Association of Marianist Universities
    • Facts & Rankings
    • CIFAL Honolulu
    • Accreditation & Memberships
    • Montessori Laboratory School
Search
×

Search this web site

Campus and Community

Chaminade University Partners with United Nations

November 3, 2021

Nikhil Seth, Executive Director of UNITAR, and Dr. Lynn Babington, Chaminade President, signing the partnership agreement

Chaminade University is proud to announce an exciting new partnership with the United Nations Institute for Training and Research (UNITAR) that will provide innovative leadership development opportunities in the islands and empower those working on community-building projects to maximize their impact.

The new UNITAR center at Chaminade is part of a global network of 21 other learning hubs worldwide.

The Chaminade center will offer education and training programs around key UN Sustainable Development Goals. The priorities for the center include climate action, advocating for the oceans, reducing inequalities, and developing programs that pursue peace, justice and strong institutions.

Dr. Lance Askildson, Chaminade provost, said the hub isn’t meant to supplant the work of other organizations in Hawaii but facilitate new conversations and bring together community stakeholders. It will also serve as a gathering place for forward-looking leadership development offerings.

“We want to engage young people. We want to engage thought leaders. We want to engage alumni,” Askildson said. “There is a tremendous amount of work to be done and everybody has a role. Our role is to do what we’ve always done: to educate young people and empower them to drive positive change.”

He added, “We are a convenor to bring people together.”

Nikhil Seth, Executive Director of UNITAR, chats with Chaminade students, faculty and staff

Askildson said the UN center is seen as an extension of Chaminade’s service-oriented mission and will put a special emphasis on inspiring and challenging students to make a positive difference in their communities with a host of unique opportunities — from individualized projects to internships.

The Experiential Honors Program at Chaminade will also be integrated with the center to maximize student engagement, and an ever-evolving sustainability curriculum will reflect student interests and needs.

The center plans to work closely with alumni and the Catholic network across Hawaii and the Pacific along with a long list of community partners — from the East-West Center to Hawaii Green Growth — to “stand on the shoulders of giants” and reach shared sustainability education goals.

“We are seeking to complement what other organizations are already doing well and not in any way duplicate or compete with good programs,” Askildson said. “One of the most important things we can do is engage with the private sector. They’re looking for ways to burnish their credentials in sustainability. They’re looking for partners who can help them with education.”

The United Nations officially invited Chaminade to establish and host the training center — whose reach includes the entire Pacific Islands region — in late 2020. The center falls under the CIFAL Global Network, a French acronym that translates to International Training Center for Local Authorities/Leaders.

Nikhil Seth, Executive Director of UNITAR, speaks to the Chaminade community

And in October, the University got the opportunity to host UN Institute for Training and Research Executive Director Nikhil Seth on campus. At a talk on campus, Seth said Chaminade was an “obvious choice when we were looking for partners in this part of the world” because of its stellar reputation, strong community partnerships, and decades of service in Hawaii and across the Pacific region.

“We want to have a bigger footprint. We want to touch the lives of many more people,” Seth said, adding that the center at Chaminade will serve as a “model for collaboration” and a place to spotlight those who share a common vision around the need for community-focused climate action.

While the center at Chaminade is still in its early days, Askildson is excited about what’s ahead.

One major upcoming planning item: Chaminade is poised to host the CIFAL Global Network annual meeting and conference in November 2022. Askildson said the event will undoubtedly bring in educators, changemakers and learners from across the globe — and across the state.

“The center is allowing us to capture a lot of the activity we’re already doing and then expand,” Askildson said. “It’s an opportunity to use that amplification and the banner of the United Nations.”

Posted by: University Communications & Marketing Filed Under: Campus and Community, CIFAL Honolulu, Featured Story, Innovation, Institutional

The Spirituality of Justice: Racism & Climate Change

October 14, 2021

Fr. Dan Horan speaking at the Mystical Rose Oratory during Chaminade's Marianist Lecture Series

The “Catholic response” to racism, climate change and other societal injustices — including those plaguing Hawaii communities — must be one centered in faith-based action that “ought to discomfit the comfortable, humble the powerful, and lift up the oppressed,” said noted author and speaker Fr. Dan Horan during a recent talk at Chaminade’s Mystical Rose Oratory for the Marianist Lecture series.

Horan, acknowledging his own status as a “temporary guest” in Hawaii, added that people in the islands must seek to learn from indigenous communities and understand their unique ways of knowing the world so they can help craft holistic, place-based responses to the greatest crises of our time.

The engaging talk on September 26 comes as the Marianist Lecture series celebrates 25 years of promoting Catholic responsibility and service, and launches a new honor — the Mackey Award for Catholic Thought — to recognize leaders advancing the Marianist spirit and educational mission.

Horan, a columnist for the National Catholic Reporter whose most recent book is titled A White Catholic’s Guide to Racism and Privilege, was the inaugural recipient of the Mackey Award. In his lecture, Horan unpacked the writings of scholar, social activist, and monk Thomas Merton (1915-1968).

Merton may not be a household name. But in 2015, Pope Francis highlighted him as one of four “representatives of the American people” who fought for equal rights—alongside Martin Luther King, Jr., Abraham Lincoln, and Dorothy Day. Horan said Merton’s writings from the 1950s and 1960s offer important lessons for modern America, including about the importance of respecting others.

“Merton was attuned in an unusual way for a white man of his time to the failure to honor the wisdom, heritage, beauty, value and dignity of culture, traditions and religions that are not part of a Euro-American hegemony that came with the colonization to these lands,” Horan said.

He added that Merton offers “timely insights” and opportunities for further reflection on Hawaiian history, colonialism, and the “local response to both systemic racism and climate change.” Perhaps a key point of inquiry, he said, is Merton’s belief that the “spirit of God draws near not just to human beings but to the whole family of creation. Everything that exists reflects or points back to the Creator.”

In other words, Horan said, Merton would have “nodded along approvingly” to indigenous understandings of nature as not something that is separated or distinct from human existence but as central to life, familial relationships to and to society. “The global response to climate change … can only take place with the privileged species, humanity, embracing a sense of creational humility,” he said.

Horan also elucidated three points for white Christians seeking to respond to racial injustice.

He said those in positions of privilege and power because of their race must focus on diagnosis and criticism, “embracing a spirit of praxis and engagement.” They must also step back, listening to those in diverse communities rather than seeking to prescribe solutions. And they must “get out of the way,” Horan added. “They need to follow rather than lead. They need to listen rather than instruct.”

Horan sought to do just that in his own talk, opening his speech by noting that aloha is “not to be granted but always earned” and allowing time after his lecture for a question-and-answer dialogue with the audience. “As a guest, I seek to support the various strategies that the indigenous peoples of Hawaii are using to protect their land and their communities,” Horan said, near the start of his speech.

“I come to this land with a deep respect in a spirit of openness — and with a desire to learn.”


Watch the full video here

Posted by: University Communications & Marketing Filed Under: Campus and Community, Catholic, Diversity and Inclusion, Featured Story Tagged With: Marianist Lecture

Dr. Lorin Ramocki and Dr. Katelyn Perrault Recognized for their Passion and Innovation in Teaching

September 24, 2021

Motivated. Innovative. Passionate. A trailblazer.

Those were some of the words used to describe this year’s faculty honorees of the Chaminade Excellence in Teaching and Scholarship awards, which recognize those going above and beyond to ensure student success in the classroom and contribute to their area of study in meaningful ways.

Lorin Ramocki

Dr. Lorin Ramocki, an assistant professor in the School of Nursing and Health Professions, received the Chaminade’s 2021 Excellence in Teaching Award for her tireless work to create hands-on simulations that promote “learning by doing.”

The simulations—which ranged from a mock homeless camp on campus to a COVID vaccination clinic to an “unfolding case study” into a Hepatitis A outbreak—were especially vital during the pandemic because COVID made some community placements for Nursing students impossible.

“The COVID pandemic created a loss of clinical rotations in both hospitals and community settings and faculty pivoted to simulation on campus as well as supporting COVID vaccination efforts,” said School of Nursing and Health Professions Dean Rhoberta Haley, PhD, who nominated Ramocki for the award.

Haley said Ramocki ensured experiential learning continued for students during the pandemic. “Dr. Ramocki is a truly creative, innovative, motivated, and effective teacher,” Haley said, “who makes Public Health content and clinical experiences come alive for each of our Nursing students.”

Ramocki said she is honored by the recognition and takes joy in using her creativity to develop “engaging learning environments to give students the best experience possible.” She added that her teaching philosophy is rooted in “developing a community within the classroom.”

“My philosophy on teaching students is really embedded in trying to inspire them to find their own interests—and then connect it back to something in public health to help them enhance their understanding and how they can impact the health of their own communities,” she said.

Katelynn Perrault

Meanwhile, the School of Natural Sciences and Mathematics’ Dr. Katelynn Perrault was recognized with the 2021 Fr. John F. Bolin Excellence in Scholarship Award for substantial contributions to her field of study. The associate professor of Forensic Sciences and Chemistry was also recently honored with the John B. Phillips Award, which recognizes early career researchers who are making advancements in the field of two-dimensional gas chromatography, which involves separating chemicals present in complex samples.

Perrault is studying odors produced by bacteria associated with decomposing bodies.

Dr. Hans Chun, director of Education Leadership Programs at Chaminade, nominated Perrault for the honor and said she has been a “trailblazer in research” since she arrived at the University. “Kate embodies the concept that teaching and research are not mutually exclusive,” Chun said.

Chun also said her work has helped to “raise Chaminade’s scholarly profile.”

Perrault said receiving the award is a “landmark moment for me” at the University and has driven her to reflect on her work—and on the work of the student researchers she is mentoring. “Seeing their contributions to science recognized gives me great joy as a mentor,” she said. Perrault added that while many people think of research as something that’s done outside of the classroom, she sees it as something central to classroom learning. “Great things can be accomplished within a class when students are set with the task of creating new knowledge on their own accord. There is something about that experience that cannot be learned in any textbook.”

Posted by: University Communications & Marketing Filed Under: Campus and Community, Faculty, Featured Story, Natural Sciences & Mathematics, Nursing & Health Professions Tagged With: Chemistry, Community and Public Health, Forensic Sciences, Honors and Awards, Nursing

Chaminade University No. 21 in Annual ‘U.S. News’ College Rankings

September 14, 2021

Chaminade University was again recognized as a top regional west university in the annual U.S. News and World Report’s 2022 Best College rankings. U.S. News and World Report produces the longest-running assessment of U.S. colleges and universities. The most recent rankings assessed 1,466 universities on 17 measures of academic quality.

The latest U.S. News and World Report rankings, released September 13, placed Chaminade University No. 25 in Regional Universities West, moving up four spots from 2021. Chaminade shares the No. 25 spot with California State University, Monterey Bay.

Chaminade University was also ranked No. 21 as a Best Value School. The ranking is based on four indicators:

  • academic quality;
  • percentage of all full-time undergraduates receiving need-based scholarships or grants;
  • average discount from the school’s total sticker price for full-time undergraduates; and
  • among 2020–2021 full-time undergraduates who received need-based aid, the percentage of that group that who also received a grant or scholarship—aid that students don’t have to pay back. 

U.S. News and World Report also recognized Chaminade University this year as a Top Performer on Social Mobility at No. 38. The Social Mobility ranking is measured by the percentage of students who received federal Pell Grants graduated. Chaminade shares the No. 25 spot with Sul Ross State University.

In individual program rankings, Chaminade’s Bachelor of Science in Nursing degree program ranked in the top 42% at No. 288 out of 690 schools. Chaminade’s Nursing program launched in 2010 with its first cohort graduating in 2014.

U.S. News and World Report is now in its 37th year of ranking colleges and universities. The rankings evaluate more than 1,400 colleges and universities on up to 17 measures of academic quality, including graduation and retention rates, undergraduate academic reputation, social mobility, graduation rate performance, faculty resources and alumni giving.

In August, Niche released its 2022 Best College Rankings. Chaminade University was ranked:

  • No. 1 Best Value Colleges in Hawaii
  • No. 1 Best College Locations in Hawaii
  • No. 1 Colleges with the Best Student Life in Hawaii
  • No. 51 Best Colleges for Criminal Justice in America (top 8%)
  • No. 123 Best College Locations in America (top 8%)
  • No. 138 Safest College Campuses in America (top 10%)
  • No. 176 Most Diverse Colleges in America (top 11%)

Posted by: University Communications & Marketing Filed Under: Campus and Community, Diversity and Inclusion, Featured Story, Institutional

Education with a Higher Purpose

September 10, 2021

Jayne Mondoy, Master of Pastoral Theology '00

Jayne Mondoy was teaching fifth through eighth grade at St. Elizabeth School in Central Oahu—and enjoying the work—when she felt driven to build her leadership skills. She started looking for a graduate program that could prepare her for the rigors of Catholic school administration.

And she found Chaminade’s Master of Pastoral Theology.

“School administration was something that I believe God was calling me to do,” said Mondoy, MPT ’00.

At Chaminade, Mondoy found a graduate program that incorporated both “practical aspects of responsible stewardship” and the mission of Catholic schools. “It really was a wonderful blending of both,” she said. “The education at Chaminade really served me well in building an awareness and a level of competence in areas that school administrators require—and certainly in my current position.”

That position is the director of the Office of Religious Education at the Diocese of Honolulu, a role Mondoy has held since 2005. Previously, she served as dean of curriculum and instruction at Saint Louis School and spent seven years teaching in Hawaii Catholic Schools.

Mondoy took a circuitous route to teaching and educational leadership.

In the late 1980s to mid-1990s, she and her husband were living in San Francisco and climbing the corporate ladder. He was in engineering and she was in merchant banking. Everything changed when they had their first child. They moved back to Hawaii, where they had both grown up.

And Mondoy decided to pursue a lifelong dream of teaching.

Education was fulfilling, challenging, inspiring—everything she’d hoped it would be. She knew administration was her next step, but she needed the right preparation. At Chaminade, she said, she found professors who were passionate and happy to give students individualized attention.

Jayne Monody, MPT '00, at Book release celebration as a new author for Loyola Press

“They actually are involved in the stuff they teach. It’s not theoretical,” Mondoy said. “I didn’t have to look too far to find mentors that helped me understand how stewardship mission truly works together.”

Mondoy added that she still uses the foundation she built at Chaminade in her everyday work.

And she continues to expand on her knowledge, too, including as a consultant for the National Conversations of Parish Life and Committee for Cultural Diversity with the US Conference of Catholic Bishops. Mondoy has also published extensively on religious education, including with her 2017 Loyola Press title, Cultivating Your Catechists: How to Recruit, Encourage, and Retain Successful Catechists.

She said she is especially excited about helping to build a stronger voice for Pacific Islanders in the national Catholic community. And she said Chaminade’s inclusive and rich campus environment helped prepare her for her current role in helping to highlight and celebrate a diversity of voices.

“I often reflect on my experiences at Chaminade, collaborating with a community of peoples from around the world. This was another way I was being prepared by just being on campus,” Mondoy said.

And to today’s emerging religious scholars considering Chaminade’s MPT program, she has this message: “Be open to that call because our world needs your voice, your leadership. Our world needs well-formed young people who have the compassion of Christ and can play that sensibility out.”

Posted by: University Communications & Marketing Filed Under: Alumni, Campus and Community, Featured Story, Humanities, Arts & Design Tagged With: Master of Pastoral Theology

Kicking Off Fall Term 2021

August 30, 2021

New students walking through the faculty tunnel at New Student Orienation

“Really, really excited!”

That’s how freshman Kinnidi Brooks described how she was feeling as she moved into Chaminade residence halls, participated in New Student Orientation activities and prepared for the first day of the Fall term which kicked off on August 23. The Environmental Sciences major said she was particularly looking forward to jumping into her studies and beginning to build her knowledge with hands-on learning.

“I’m also really looking forward to being on my own,” added Brooks, laughing.

She then turned to her mom Keya Smith, standing beside her, and said: “I love you!”

Chaminade’s new academic year kickoff included various activities for new and returning students alike. Among the Welcome Back Week festivities: an outdoor barbecue, a bubble tea tasting and an opportunities fair that offered information about student clubs and organizations, academics and a host of great resources and development programs available to students.

The first week of school rounded out with the Fall Spiritual Convocation.

And on the evening of August 27, students gathered to watch a movie—“Freaky Friday”. Food was provided at the fun “Movie on the Lawn” event.

Earlier in the week, Chaminade President Lynn Babington, PhD, welcomed New Student Orientation participants, offering advice for the year ahead and encouraging them to seek out support when they need it. Her message to students: you are now a valued part of the Chaminade ‘ohana.

“You will form bonds here that will help to guide you and shape you wherever your path in life takes you,” Babington told students, adding Chaminade is proud to offer a holistic and service-focused academic experience designed to inspire students to use what they learn to help others.

“Each of you has your own unique gifts and potential.”

Students learning at an outdoor classroom during the first day of Fall Term

Provost Lance Askildson, PhD, also spoke as part of New Student Orientation events, telling students Chaminade not only seeks to educate the mind but the whole person. “We aspire to transform you and your peers into leaders and changemakers,” he said, “who will not only achieve academic and professional success but also draw upon your achievements to give back to society.”

Preparation for the kickoff of the new school year began on August 19, when new and returning students started moving into Chaminade residence halls. Move-in times were staggered to allow for proper social distancing and students were able to bring a guest with them to help them move in.

Loke Yokoyama, a freshman majoring in Business Administration, said the welcome activities and festivities for new and returning students helped her feel at home at Chaminade. “It’s starting to settle in,” Yokoyama said, as she prepared for the first day of school. “I’m just kind of excited.”

Freshman Alex Ramirez, a Religious Studies major, was also grateful for the warm welcome.

“The first day and I feel like I’m at home already,” he said.

He added that he really loves the look and feel of the Chaminade campus and is looking forward to making new friends. Another priority on his list: “getting involved with service-learning opportunities.”

Posted by: University Communications & Marketing Filed Under: Campus and Community, Featured Story, Institutional

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 28
  • Page 29
  • Page 30
  • Page 31
  • Page 32
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 51
  • Go to Next Page »

Footer

Chaminade University Logo

3140 Waialae Avenue
Honolulu, Hawaii 96816

Contact Us
Phone: (808) 735-4711
Toll-free: (800) 735-3733

facebook twitter instagram youtube linkedin

Visit

  • Plan Your Visit
  • Campus Map (PDF)
  • Events

Resources

  • Campus Security
  • Student Consumer Information
  • Concerns, Feedback, and Reporting
  • Institutional Review Board
  • Title IX / Nondiscrimination Policy
  • Compliance
  • Emergency Information
  • Careers
  • Institutional Statement

People

  • Students
  • Parents
  • Alumni
  • Faculty & Staff

Policy

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions of Use


© Chaminade University of Honolulu