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On Tuesday, January 20, Kevin J Worthen, president of Brigham Young University, addressed the students, faculty, and staff of Brigham Young University–Hawaii at the weekly Devotional held in the Cannon Activities Center. President Worthen’s address, entitled “Holy Places,” detailed ways in which we can turn everyday places, even haunted places, into holy places.
On Tuesday, January 20, Kevin J Worthen, president of Brigham Young University (Provo), will be giving the weekly Devotional on the BYU–Hawaii campus in the Cannon Activities Center at 11 AM (HST). Everyone is invited to attend. His talk is entitled “Holy Places.”
President Steven C. Wheelwright welcomed students to campus on Tuesday, January 13, at the weekly Devotional. In his talk, entitled, “An Education of the Heart,” he counseled students to find ways in which they could grow spiritually during this upcoming semester. “That ‘education of the heart’ shapes our character, our conscience, and our spirit and thus determines our eternal destiny,” said President Wheelwright. “In other words, that ‘education of the heart’ determines who we really are.”
Two BYU–Hawaii students recently returned from Xi’an, China, studying Mandarin and Chinese culture after receiving help from the Asian Executive Management program. One of them earned a prestigious designation as a Boren Scholar. Jarek and Kaylee Buss spent a year in China and are now back at BYU–Hawaii to finish their degrees. That experience was made possible because Jarek received a Boren Scholarship and both of them were enrolled in the Asian Executive Management program.
Twitter, Facebook, Pintrest, YouTube – these along with a host of other ‘social media’ channels have changed the way we communicate – and even associate – with other people. Brian Kinghorn, an assistant professor of psychology at BYU–Hawaii, recently developed a new college course that is dedicated to better understanding this impact. The course, Psychology of Social Media, impressed leading psychological scientists and academics, resulting in Kinghorn being asked to write a feature that was published in the Association for Psychological Science’s professional journal, the Observer.
The Willes Center for Entrepreneurship at BYU–Hawaii is well known for hosting its annual Great Ideas competition in the Fall and a companion event in the Winter semester called Empower Your Dreams. While the Great Ideas competition is typically comprised of students presenting business ideas and plans, this year included a new twist, matching the rapid evolving pace of the millennial generation. With YouTube being the world’s second largest search engine, the Fall 2014 business competition focused on video. The official title of this year’s competition was the “Great Ideas Video Competition: Tell Your Business Story.”
It’s common knowledge that attendance matters at any level of educational setting. Unexcused absence from school, or truancy, has been a significant issue in the United States for many decades. Now, thanks to a new wide-ranging study, educators can have better tools to help students want to be in class and even be better prepared for their time there.
BYU–Hawaii has many resources for providing students the support they need to successfully pursue their education, including various labs and centers for tutoring, counseling, and advice. The newly renamed Center for Academic Success (previously called the Center for Academic Support) is one of these.
BYU–Hawaii welcomes a new director of enterprise information systems: Jeff Strain. Strain comes from the LDS Church Educational System, working there since February 2001. He started at LDS Business College where he worked with Oracle and PeopleSoft and helped organize and jump start a helpdesk. While at LDSBC, Strain served on several technical CES-wide committees. He continued his involvement on the committees but made the switch to BYU (Provo) in April 2005. There, Jeff helped in maturing their ERP system as well as their Linux environments.
In October 2014, Dr. Helena M. A. Hannonen, a BYU–Hawaii faculty member, received the Lowell Benson Lifetime Service Award from the BYU Marriott School of Management. Dr. Hannonen received the prestigious award for her many years of involvement in BYU’s Management Society, particularly for all her work as the president of Silicon Valley chapter and starting Silicon Valley WOMEN, as well as being the regional director for Northern California and later Asia-Pacific regions.
This week, the Music and Theatre department presents the world premiere of the play One Tattered Angel, written by Craig Ferre and adapted from the book by Blaine Yorgason.
The BYU–Hawaii Ohana has recently announced changes in the university’s academic leadership. Some of these appointments and changes have previously been announced and took affect as of the beginning of the new academic year. With these changes, an extension of gratitude is expressed to those who have served in the various academic assignments for all the time, energy and dedication they put forth.