UH-Hilo celebrates in-person fall commencement on Saturday

LUNDBLAD
Subscribe Now Choose a package that suits your preferences.
Start Free Account Get access to 7 premium stories every month for FREE!
Already a Subscriber? Current print subscriber? Activate your complimentary Digital account.

The University of Hawaii at Hilo will celebrate its 2021 Fall Commencement with two in-person ceremonies, to be held Saturday in Vulcan Gym. The ceremony may also be viewed via live stream at: https://hilo.hawaii.edu/commencement. The ceremonies have been modified from previous years to provide for COVID-19 safety protocols.

The first ceremony begins at 9 a.m. for students in the College of Arts and Sciences, Ka Haka ‘Ula O Ke‘elikolani College of Hawaiian Language, and College of Agriculture, Forestry, and Natural Resource Management. The second ceremony begins at 2 p.m. for students in the College of Natural and Health Sciences, College of Business and Economics, and Daniel K. Inouye College of Pharmacy.

Approximately 232 students have petitioned for degrees and/or certificates and for various post-graduate credentials. Students are allowed to invite two guests that must be registered and present a proof of COVID-19 vaccination or negative COVID-19 test in order to enter.

Dr. Steve Lundblad, professor of geology at UH-Hilo, provides the keynote address. Originally from Yakima, Wash., Lundblad said he experienced first-hand the eruption of Mt. St. Helens as it covered his town with ash during his high school years. This coupled with his interest in the outdoors fostered an interest in geology that continues today.

Since 2003, Lundblad has been teaching geology courses at UH-Hilo, including field courses to the southwestern U.S. Along with his students, he measures ground movement of Kilauea Volcano both near the summit caldera and in the lower east rift zone, which continues a decades-old data collection program begun by the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory.

The student speaker is April Alohalani Kaluhiokalani Housman, a Ph.D. candidate in Hawaiian and Indigenous Language and Culture Revitalization.

Housman was a faculty member with Ka Haka ‘Ula O Ke‘elikolani College of Hawaiian Language and served as the Director of the Hale Kuamo‘o Hawaiian Language Center before retiring in 2015. She was honored as the NHEA Educator of the Year in March 2008 for her many years of service in the Hawaiian language revitalization movement. She is a mother of four and grandmother of eight Hawaiian-speaking children, and has a long and distinctive career in public education that began in 1984 as the Leeward District Hawaiian Studies Resource Teacher.

In addition, she was the first to pioneer the Hawaiian language immersion program in the Hawaii public school system on Oahu in 1987, mentored and trained new teachers, developed curriculum, and taught elementary through intermediate immersion education throughout Hawaii. She’s a faculty member of the Hawaiian Studies program at Brigham Young University-Hawaii.

The ceremony will be recorded and available for viewing at: https://hilo.hawaii.edu/commencement.