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Secondary Education

Leadership Journey: A ‘Dream Come True’

October 1, 2024

This Chaminade graduate is excited to set the course for her alma mater, Sacred Hearts Academy

The new president of Sacred Hearts Academy is a familiar name there—and at Chaminade.

Brandy Ann Sato ’97, MAT ’02, Ph.D. has served in various roles at Sacred Hearts. She’s taught elementary to high school grades, held the vice principal position and became a board member in 2014.

Taking over the helm at the school, she said, is a “dream come true.”

“I’ve always had a special connection with the school,” she added.


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An all-girls private Catholic school, Sacred Hearts Academy’s enrollment stands at close to 500.

Sato notes that faculty members mentor their students to become strong women.

In Sacred Heart’s boardroom, the words “Where Girls Who Aspire Become Women Who Inspire” stretch across the wall. Sitting in the boardroom on a recent day, Sato says that motto “says it all.”

After serving in previous roles with Sacred Hearts Academy, Dr. Brandy Sato is now the president of the private, all-girls school.
After serving in previous roles with Sacred Hearts Academy, Dr. Brandy Sato is now the president of the private, all-girls school.

A Lancer alumni, Sato describes her peers of the Class of 1994 as “high achieving,” adding that some of her friends attended Harvard, Notre Dame and Georgetown universities.

She chose instead to stay home and attend Chaminade University—the only Catholic Marianist university in Hawaii.

Graduating first with her bachelor’s in History and Political Science, Sato then attained her Master’s of Art in Teaching with a concentration in Secondary Education. She later earned her Doctorate in Education at the University of Hawaii at Mānoa.

“If Chaminade had its doctor of education then, I would have stayed,” Sato said. “The experience at Chaminade taught me the importance of building lifelong relationships and service to the community.”

Sato said she understands that leading a private Catholic high school in Hawaii holds particular significance because of the unique cultural and religious diversity of the islands. She says balancing Catholic traditions and values with inclusivity and contemporary perspectives is key.

“Hawai’i’s population is notably diverse, with strong roots in Native Hawaiian traditions, Asian cultures, and Pacific Islander values,” Sato said. “A Catholic high school can build bridges by emphasizing universal values like respect, compassion and service, which resonate across different cultures.”

A focus on enrollment is among Sato’s top priorities.

“We provide an exceptional education,” Sato said. “We’re modernizing our education through technology, and we continue to develop a strong STEM curriculum.”

Aside from being “book smart,” Sacred Hearts students also have the opportunity to participate and serve in the community, as well as participate in various sports and a vibrant performing arts program.

Students also have the chance to opt into Chaminade’s Early College Program, allowing them to earn an associate’s degree in Liberal Arts without ever officially stepping into a classroom on campus.

“It’s a great opportunity for our students to learn in a college setting,” Sato said. “It’s certainly a beneficial partnership, and I believe we can further strengthen the EC Program.”

One of the intangibles that Sato likes to point out is Sacred Hearts faculty seek to make learning fun. “When the students can feel and see that joy, it makes it that much easier to teach them,” she said.

Posted by: University Communications & Marketing Filed Under: Alumni, Education, Featured Story Tagged With: Elementary Education, Master of Education, Secondary Education

School of Education Welcomes Alumni

June 14, 2024

School of Education alumni and faculty gathered recently to share stories and trade laughs

The sun hung low in the sky, casting a golden hue over Brogan Hall’s patio deck.

It was a perfect summer evening, one that seemed tailor-made for the occasion: A reunion of School of Education and Behavioral Sciences graduates.

The event had been weeks in the planning, said Assistant Professor of Special Education and Elementary Education Dr. Denise Dugan, who organized the reunion.

Dugan said she wanted to give alumni the chance to talk story and rekindle old friendships. As guests trickled in, each was greeted with warm embraces.

“The main reason I wanted to do this was to get our former students who are current teachers in Hawaii together to network,” Dugan said. “There is so little support for our teachers, so I wanted them to be able to connect and find support systems still here with Chaminade.”

Class reunions play a big role in maintaining a vibrant alumni community, nurturing connections, and supporting the ongoing mission and goals of Chaminade.

Campus leaders say aside from networking and a sense of nostalgia, reunions strengthen the sense of community and belonging among alumni, as well as afford the opportunity to reconnect with former professors and mentors, fostering a continued relationship and sometimes even collaboration in academic or professional fields.

By creating positive experiences and reinforcing the value of the alumni community, reunions can motivate attendees to stay involved with the university through volunteer work, mentoring and other forms of engagement. Attendees also often use reunions as a time for personal reflection, to assess how far they’ve come since their college days and to set new personal and professional goals.

As the evening progressed, the alumni took turns sharing their experiences. They laughed over amusing classroom anecdotes, and offered advice for overcoming common challenges. The conversation flowed easily, a testament to the strong bond these Silverswords had formed during their Chaminade years.

School of Education and Behavioral Sciences Dean Dale Fryxell and Bro. Allen A. Pacquing, SM, flank alumna Dr. Brandy Sato BA '97, MEd '03.
School of Education and Behavioral Sciences Dean Dale Fryxell and Bro. Allen A. Pacquing, SM, flank alumna Dr. Brandy Sato BA ’97, MEd ’03.
Katrina Roseler, Ph.D., Director of Teacher Preparation Programs and Associate Professor, standing right, posed for a photo with her former students.
Katrina Roseler, Ph.D., Director of Teacher Preparation Programs and Associate Professor, standing right, posed for a photo with her former students.
Katrina Roseler, Ph.D., Director of Teacher Preparation Programs and Associate Professor, right, wraps her arm around Sarah Sousa BA '17, MEd '19.
Katrina Roseler, Ph.D., Director of Teacher Preparation Programs and Associate Professor, right, wraps her arm around Sarah Sousa BA ’17, MEd ’19.
Dr. Denise Dugan sits down with alumnae to talk story.
Dr. Denise Dugan sits down with alumnae to talk story.

Posted by: University Communications & Marketing Filed Under: Alumni, Education, Faculty, Featured Story, Institutional Tagged With: Early Education, Elementary Education, Master of Education, Secondary Education

Artificial Intelligence

January 18, 2024

Embracing the use of AI in education

Dr. Denise Dugan believes that AI will only continue to progress and evolve as new data flows in.
Dr. Denise Dugan believes that AI will only continue to progress and evolve as new data sets flows in.

Long before it was reduced to an uppercase two-letter acronym, artificial intelligence (AI) was already present in education with early systems focused on using simple algorithms to automate certain educational tasks. In the 1970s, the emergence of Intelligent Tutoring Systems (ITS) was designed to provide personalized instruction based on individual student needs, more commonly known today as Individual Educational Plans. These days, OpenAI dominates the conversation and headlines.

“AI has been in education in some iteration for decades now,” says Denise Dugan, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Special Education and Elementary Education. “The danger of AI these days is that current students have too much reliance on it, rather than simply using it as another available resource.”

In an op-ed to the “Chicago Tribune,” Chaminade Provost Lance Askildson opines that recent advances in artificial intelligence have given rise to hyperbolic predictions of the decline of many human roles and professions.

“In fact, purported AI platforms such as ChatGPT will never be meaningful replacements for writers, educators or people in general,” Askildson writes. “To understand why this is true, it is critical to remind ourselves of what ChatGPT is and how its architecture and capabilities relate to the science of human learning and the arts of writing and teaching, respectively.”

The conversation around AI didn’t just begin in 2023. The U.S. Department of Education initiated a project exploring the use of generative AI in 2020, partnering with Digital Promise to collect information and insights. Recently, the outcomes of that work were released by the U.S. Department of Education Office of Educational Technology. Titled “Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Teaching and Learning: Insights and Recommendations,” the new report addresses the clear need for sharing knowledge, engaging educators, and refining technology plans and policies for artificial intelligence (AI) use in education.

The report further describes AI as a rapidly-advancing set of technologies for recognizing patterns in data and automating actions, and guides educators in understanding what these emerging technologies can do to advance educational goals—while evaluating and limiting key risks. This paper also explains AI in education and gives a pros-and-cons summary, and suggests districts develop a policy defining parameters for AI use in education.

During an educator workshop hosted by Hawaii Education Association, Dugan and Chaminade students Abigail Eli ’23 Gabe Zapata-Berrios ’24 were among the attendees who discussed not only the ethical dimensions of AI, but also its legal ramifications.

“I can see how AI is having an impact on educators and students,” says Eli, who is pursuing her master’s in counseling psychology at Chaminade and is one of three Community Homeless Concerns liaisons with the Hawaii Department of Education in the Nanakuli-Waianae Complex Area. “I think it could be beneficial for our Waianae students who struggle with the concept of writing. I think they can learn from seeing something that’s well written.”

Starting his student teaching in Kailua, Zapata-Berrios has experimented with AI in his own studies, using it, for example, to create lesson plans, which typically take a lot of time.

“AI will write a complete lesson plan in less than 10 seconds,” Zapata-Berrios says. “This lesson plan is typically pretty good as a first draft. If I want I can ask the AI to revise it for me or I can just take that draft and revise it myself. I would always recommend revising it yourself because AI is not perfect.”

Abigail Eli '23 is now pursuing her master’s in counseling psychology at Chaminade.
Abigail Eli ’23 is now pursuing her master’s in counseling psychology at Chaminade.

While academic dishonesty tops the list of educators’ concerns about AI in education, teachers also worry that increased use of AI may mean learners receive less human contact. It’s a valid point that Askildson succinctly affirms in his letter to the editor, noting that “the science of human learning has shown us that students learn not only through their abilities of reasoning, interpretation and creative expression—which ChatGPT lacks— but also with the help of teachers who engage them in a two-way dialogue accompanied by feedback that is adjusted to their understanding and overall needs.”

From a student’s perspective, the use of AI in education comes with both benefits and potential pitfalls. Some view AI-powered tools as a way to provide additional support to students with diverse learning abilities, making education more inclusive. It can then assist in addressing specific challenges students may face.

Others are skeptical about its accuracy and its susceptibility to spread misinformation and disinformation. It’s also biased since AI can only be as smart or effective as the quality of data it is provided, and algorithms can be manipulated and skewed.

“Some of the teachers we heard from said they wanted to stay away from AI all together, that it was too controversial,” Dugan says. “They were afraid of plagiarism and cheating, and not being able to detect it. But I say AI is here to stay; it’s not going to go away and it will only progress.”

“AI is going to keep growing and infiltrating more parts of our lives,” adds Zapata-Berrios. “It’s already all over the place and constantly analyzing and improving. It will become more prevalent in classrooms, however, I don’t think it will become something that the students use to outsource their thinking. I think it’ll be present without the students knowing it’s there.”

Posted by: University Communications & Marketing Filed Under: Education, Faculty, Homepage, Innovation, Institutional, Student Life Tagged With: Elementary Education, Master of Arts in Teaching, Secondary Education

True Calling

December 18, 2023

As a Zoo Camp instructor, Sara Aliza Sahagon finally found her true passion—to teach.

Sara Aliza Sahagon ’24 holds down two jobs: her regular day job as a long-term substitute teacher at Kauai High School and what she defines as her “heart job,” which is taking care of her community service programs, a passion she has maintained since she was a young Chamorro in Guam.

“I wanted to become a social worker when I was younger,” says Sahagon, who will walk in the May 2025 Commencement Ceremony. “I was volunteering with Youth for Youth LIVE! Guam, which is a non-profit community-based, youth-centered, youth-driven drug prevention program for teens between the ages of 11 and 17. This is what I thought I was going to do for the rest of my life.”

Sara Aliza Sahagon serves as the head advisor with Kauai High School's Key Club, which focuses on community service.
Sara Aliza Sahagon serves as the head advisor with Kauai High School’s Key Club, which focuses on community service.

Her mom, Stacey Coletta, had other plans for her daughter. Although accepted into Stanford, Coletta was restrained from attending the private research university due to tuition and board costs. Understandably, she wanted Sara and her older sister, Hanna, to move off island, and to explore and experience the world through another lens.

In her senior year at Notre Dame in Talo’fo’fo’, Sahagon applied to the University of Hawaii–Manoa and Hawaii Pacific University (HPU). Unfortunately, she admittedly missed the Chaminade University application deadline.

“I wanted to find an open world,” Sahagon says. “I wanted to meet new people who weren’t related to me. I wanted to experience new things, but I still wasn’t ready to leave the island lifestyle all behind, like my older sister did when she went to school in San Diego. So, Oahu was perfect for me.”

Accepted to HPU, Sahagon was excited to go to college … until she got there. The classrooms, she says, felt like they were closing in on her and doubts of her academic knowledge crept in, incapacitating her from thinking and constantly intimidated by her fellow classmates. It was a shock to Sahagon because she had always been at the top of her class back in Guam, earning As and merits for her work.

“I couldn’t deal with traditional college,” Sahagon says. “I felt dumber than everyone in the room, and it really brought me down. So, I dropped out after my first year.”

After bouncing from job to job, from Kate Spade to Bath & Body Works, Sahagon landed an instructor position with the Honolulu Zoo’s “Zoo Camp.” After years of searching, the 23 year old finally found her true calling. She flourished, and learned and absorbed everything she could about zoology—from the various species to their different habitats.

“I worked at the Zoo for three years until COVID hit,” Sahagon laments. “I loved teaching and I knew that’s what I wanted to do. I did find another position with After-School All-Stars Hawaii, which provides school-based, after-school and summer programs for underserved communities and students. I ran my own site.”

As fruitful and satisfying as the experience was at After-School All-Stars Hawaii, constantly nagging in the back of Sahagon’s mind was college. By now, her mom—a lifetime educator and the current vice principal (Academy of Human Services) at Kauai High School—had moved to the Garden Isle, and they would frequently speak of Sahagon returning to college. Sahagon, though, was trapped in that circuitous 9-5 cycle on Oahu. She would constantly tell herself that she was going to be a teacher and no one was going to stop her—except herself.

Sara Aliza Sahagon's experience as a Zoo Camp instructor led her to finally find her true calling.
Sara Aliza Sahagon’s experience as a Zoo Camp instructor led her to finally find her true calling—to teach.

Although Coletta initially discouraged her two daughters from becoming teachers—only because she knew how hard it is to be a teacher— having been one herself for years—she was now supporting Sara’s dream. It was now or never.

“My mom told me that if I wanted to become a teacher, now was the time because there’s a shortage of teachers every where,” Sahagon recalls. “She had one stipulation: I had to move to Kauai. She said to me, ‘You’re going to get it done and you’re going to do great things.'”

It was enough of a push to motivate Sahagon to move with her mom and stepdad. She began researching various programs and colleges, and looked into the online programs at University of Phoenix. In the end, Chaminade’s Flex option won her over.

“I chose Chaminade because it keeps spirituality at the forefront, which helps keep me grounded,” asserts Sahagon, now the head adviser of the high school’s Key Club, which focuses on community service. “I also hold the same Marianist-Catholic values. I know that everything I do has a purpose; every exam, every activity and every paper has meaning.”

Now in her second year of the Flex program, Sahagon’s Chaminade experience is the antipode of HPU. These days, it’s just her in the competition, and she feels she has “strong support” from the University’s faculty and staff. Sahagon says, with her Chaminade education, she will be well prepared to have her own classroom. She has already applied concepts that she has learned in her classes with her students. And she has learned different teaching strategies that are effective. 

“I wish I had applied to Chaminade earlier,” Sahagon says. “It’s been a very positive experience and I love being a Silversword. I feel truly blessed to be able to finish my college degree at Chaminade.”

Posted by: University Communications & Marketing Filed Under: Education, Featured Story, Institutional, Student Life Tagged With: FLEX Program, Secondary Education

Back to School

September 15, 2023

First cohort of Mu’o Scholarship recipients begin their journey to a teaching career

Efforts to address Hawaii’s teacher shortage have come in all different forms, from monetary incentives to scholarships. Recognizing the critical need for early education teachers in Hawaiʻi, Chaminade University and Kamehameha Schools have established the Mu‘o Scholarship, an innovative and community-focused teacher prep partnership that will provide tuition funding to educate, train and prepare aspiring teachers to lead Hawaii’s classrooms.  

“By providing these scholarships, we’re removing barriers that too often hinder many working adults in the state from obtaining a bachelor’s degree while still maintaining family and work commitments,” says Chaminade University President Lynn Babington, Ph.D. “Mu’o means to bud, and we believe our Mu’o Program will allow us to grow teachers, to bud teachers who will positively impact our communities through their teaching careers for generations to come.”  

This month, the first cohort of 49 Mu‘o Scholarship recipients began their path toward earning their teaching degrees. Of the 49 new students, 32 of them identified as Native Hawaiian, which matters because, like elsewhere around the country, the public education teacher workforce in Hawaii does not mirror the diversity of the student population. New York Times writer Claire Cain Miller cites research that says “students tend to benefit from having teachers who look like them, especially nonwhite students.”  

To address Hawaii's teacher shortage, Chaminade University and Kamehameha Schools have introduced their own new carrot: an innovative and community-focused teacher prep partnership that will provide 150 Muʻo Scholarships to educate, train and prepare aspiring teachers to lead Hawaiʻi’s classrooms.
Vice Provost Janet Davidson welcomes Muo scholars.

The same research shows that students perform better when they have teachers who reflect their race and gender, particularly in disadvantaged, high minority areas. However, this leads to another question: Do teachers who have a better cultural understanding of their students tend to stay longer in their roles? In Hawaii, the short answer is yes.  

“From Hanapepe to Hilo, we want to provide pathways to a college degree, and we believe that our Mu‘o Program will allow us to do that,” says Janet Davidson, Ph.D., Vice Provost of Academic Affairs. “By increasing opportunities for culturally relevant professional development, we significantly increase students’ success, and we see our students succeed to degree completion.”  

The Mu‘o Scholarship recipients also come from four of the major islands, with 14 from the Hawaii Island, 28 from Honolulu, eight from Kauai and five from Maui. Students’ majors also vary, with one concentrating on secondary education and another in elementary education, and the rest are majoring in either Early Childhood Education or Early Childhood Education with Montessori Credential.  

“We did some surveys and early childhood educators indicated their life situations didn’t allow them to take in-person courses,” says Dr. Elizabeth Park, Associate Professor and Director of Early Childhood Education with Montessori Credential. “So what we did was spend the energy and the time to design robust online courses to meet the needs of our educators.”      

Chaminade’s online bachelor’s degree program is designed for working adults in Hawai‘i who may already be serving as a teacher’s aide or, currently, in a similar position. The online delivery format will allow students to continue working while pursuing their bachelor’s degree. Program information is available and applications for the scholarships are being accepted. This transformative program is 100 percent online, with a requirement to complete a student-teaching track. Students will be paired with an academic advisor to guide them on the road to graduation.  

“Chaminade and Kamehameha Schools deeply value education, and we know a teacher-prep program, like our Mu‘o Program, will help address the teacher shortage here in Hawaii,” Davidson says. “And we know that education, especially from early childhood, has such a positive impact on our kids, their families and the community.”

Posted by: University Communications & Marketing Filed Under: Diversity and Inclusion, Education, Featured Story, Innovation, Institutional Tagged With: Elementary Education, Montessori, Online Undergraduate Program, Secondary Education

Secondary Education Student Wins MLA Student Essay Contest

January 9, 2020

Jennifer Nguyen '22 with author Viet Thanh Nguyen
Jennifer Nguyen ’22 with author Viet Thanh Nguyen. Jennifer cited his work multiple times in her essay.

Jennifer Nguyen ’22 calls herself a “history fanatic.”

She’s an online undergraduate student studying Secondary Education at Chaminade and hopes to one day teach history. So when her English professor, Dr. Brooke Carlson, assigned her class an argumentative essay designed to be something of a self-exploration she knew instantly what she would write about.

She took on nothing less than the Vietnam War, a topic that has haunted her since childhood.

“I find many reasons to be proud of my American heritage,” Nguyen said, in a recent interview. “On the other side, I find myself drawn to the stories, the struggle, and the memory of a war that has affected not only my family but all those who were lost, displaced, resettled, disturbed.”

Her essay explores the problematic way in which Americans collectively remember the war, offering a powerful alternative for recalling a bloody and protracted conflict that Nguyen said is meant to reflect her “love for the American value of expression and a love for cultural identity.”

Her powerful perspective didn’t just impress her professor.

It also garnered a national award: Out of hundreds of submissions from around the country, “The Vietnam War, the American War: Literature, Film, and Popular Memory” was selected as a winner in the MLA (Modern Language Association) Student Paper Contest. A committee of judges said Nguyen’s essay not only had a clear thesis and excellent sources, but the topic and her argument were “compelling.”

In winning the award, Nguyen’s essay will also be published on the MLA Style Center, a hub geared toward students from high school to graduate school that’s meant to demonstrate how to correctly use MLA style – and, of course, write a good essay.

Nguyen said the essay was a “passion project” that was made possible thanks to her partnership with Carlson. Nguyen said her professor suggested she submit the essay to the MLA and then helped her cut the word count and offered other suggestions for tweaks.

“Without him, I would not have even known or considered submitting my work to the MLA contest,” Nguyen said, adding that “This essay really was a joy to research and write. I hope to continue on this path and produce more work that sheds light on important issues.”

Posted by: University Communications & Marketing Filed Under: Education, Faculty, Featured Story, Students Tagged With: English, Honors and Awards, Online Undergraduate Program, Secondary Education

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