05 February 2011

The Final Final Paper


Yay! The paper is done. Not the best work, though I feel pretty confident about it. The final paper is an actual online course proposal. So my course will be “History of Hula: A Living Tradition.” Is that a catchy title or what?
It is exciting to think that by the end of four courses in this program, I will have a full fledged course. Okay, some bad news. The deadline for the final paper was 12:00 am Midnight, Friday 02/04/11. I emailed Anne at around 10:30 pm letting her know that there is a high probablity that it would be a bit late. Had some difficulties with creating my own rubric to grade my own paper. Yikes!
Well, the sad part is that I did finish at 1:48 am. But even sadder is that the Blackboard system shuts down between 1:45 am and 3:30 am for weekly maintenance—on Fridays!
&^%$#@!
So now, I am doing all I can to finish all my coursework so I can focus on preparing for my workshops and the trip to teach. It is around 2:37 am right now. Almost an hour left. Maybe just a little nap...
Liko
Rationale for “History of Hula: A Living Tradition.”


Hula is the traditional dance of the Hawaiian people. Sacred, religious and spiritual, entertaining, hula is perpetuated through the generations from antiquity until today. The Hawaiian renaissance in the 1970s revitalized pride in Hawaiian language and the arts, delivering the culture from near extinction. Today, hula enjoys worldwide respect and interest. As a Native Hawaiian scholar, cultural practitioner, and technologist, I propose offering an online course to provide students locally and internationally, a historical perspective of hula. Through a chronological, visual, aural, and textual survey of the major time periods in hula, students will be able to evaluate and identify the significant hula styles prevalent today.

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