Partners In Development Foundation Explained

Partners In Development Foundation
Type:501(c)(3) non-profit organization
Purpose:To inspire and equip families and communities for success and service using timeless Native Hawaiian values and traditions.
Leader Name:Jan E. Dill, Morris T. Takushi, Gary A. Glenn
Leader Title:Founders
Headquarters:Honolulu, Hawaii, U.S.
Region:Hawaii

Partners in Development Foundation (PIDF), an IRS Section 501(c)(3) non-profit public foundation,[1] was incorporated in 1997 in Honolulu, Hawaii. It has established and implemented programs in the areas of education, social services, Hawaiian culture, Hawaiian language, and preservation of more than $1.6 million from the US Department of Education through the Native Hawaiian Education Act. The grants were awarded for the purpose of continuing, expanding, and improving the educational programs of PIDF.[2]

Programs and Services

Education

The project provides teachers a four-week intensive training/ collaboration period to enhance their teaching practices. Teachers work with instructional coaches to create units of instruction for their respective content area(s). Coaches provide critical feedback and research based instructional strategies to enhance the curriculum development process.

Over the three-year grant period, this project expects to serve 88 teachers and 486 students at selected schools within geographic areas of Hawaii Island that have a high rate of Native Hawaiian students. The main objectives are as follows:

Social Services

In 2006, Partners in Development Foundation was awarded a master contract from the Department of Human Services (DHS) to create and implement innovative strategies to better meet the needs of Hawai‘i's children in foster care and the resource families that care for them. Hui Ho‘omalu comprises Partners in Development Foundation, Catholic Charities Hawai‘i, and Family Programs Hawai‘i. These agencies, in partnership with DHS, address the identification, recruitment, screening, training and ongoing support and retention of Resource Families for children and families in the care of DHS.

Environmental

The Living Machine™ technology was developed in the 1980s by inventor scientist, Dr. John Todd of Ocean Arks International and was used to build the Green Machine that is housed at the Hawai‘i Nature Center in Makiki. Educational programs are conducted for Hawai‘i's students where they can do experiments at the constructed wetland laboratory. The educational curriculum introduces students to the water cycle, nutrient cycle and the role of wetland ecologies in the watershed. Various lessons have been developed for different ages and meet all of the State of Hawai‘i science content standards. The Green Machine also treats a thousand gallons a day of domestic wastewater from the park facilities to bring it to Hawai‘i DOH R-2 reuse quality. The Green Machine hosts K-12 classes each month to see firsthand the natural processes of waste treatment.

Projects and Partnerships

Hawaiian Language

Digital image files of every page of the original Palapala Hemolele (published in 1839), the revised Baibala Hemolele (published in 1868), and the 1994 Baibala Hemolele have been created and are available on the Internet at Baibala.org. Searchable text files of all three Baibala and the Baibala Hemolele in the new orthography are also available on the website, as well as a recording track of the entire Baibala.

In 2012 the project, in partnership with Mutual Publishing, will publish the Hawaiian Bible in the new orthography. It will mark the first time the Hawaiian language bible has been formatted and printed with the diacritical markings: the ʻOkina and Kahakō. It will include genealogy pages and biblical maps in Hawaiian.

Previous Programs

Notes and References

  1. https://apps.irs.gov/app/eos/pub78Search.do?ein1=94-3271325&names=Partners+In+Development+Foundation&city=Honolulu&state=HI&country=US&deductibility=all&dispatchMethod=searchCharities&submitName=Search IRS.gov
  2. Web site: Nagaoka. Ashley. HAWAII TO RECEIVE MORE THAN $13 MILLION IN NATIVE HAWAIIAN EDUCATION GRANTS. 2012-06-13. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120926232753/http://hanabusa.house.gov/press-release/hawaii-receive-more-13-million-native-hawaiian-education-grants. 2012-09-26.
  3. Web site: 2019-07-30 . It’s a Special Relationship: Tūtū and Me - Generations Magazine . 2023-11-02 . en-US.
  4. Web site: 2019-06-12 . Nā Pono No Nā ʻOhana Partners in Development Foundation . 2022-05-25 . en-US.
  5. University of Hawaii, Center on the Family, Homeless Service UtilizationReport, 2009; U.S. Census Bureau, 2008 Population Estimates.
  6. Kanani Kaaiawahia Bulawan (Administrative Advisor, Wai’anae Community Outreach), e-mail message to Institute for Childhood and Poverty, January 31, 2010.