To honor Edith Kuttner for all she has done for foreign language
education in Hawai‘i and for HALT, HALT has established the
Edith Kuttner Memorial Fund. We encourage you to join us in building
this fund and remember Edith’s lasting contributions. Donations
can be sent to HALT, P.O. Box 61903, Honolulu, HI 96838-1903. Please
note that the money is for the Edith Kuttner Memorial Fund.
Edith Kuttner Essay Contest
A LETTER OF THANKS
Dear HALT members,
My husband and I were so touched and overwhelmed with the beautiful
tribute HALT gave to my Mom at your annual conference on March 13th.
We know she was looking down and smiling and was so honored with
the beautiful tribute and wonderful memories shared by Teresita
Ramos, Hazel Hasegawa, and Cynthia Ning.
Thank you for establishing the Edith Kuttner Scholarship Fund. Her
beautiful memory, legacy, and dedication to foreign language studies
will live on through the scholarship fund.
Mahalo Nui Loa.
With Our Warmest Aloha
Bonny and Nick Tinebra and Family
March 16, 2004
REMEMBERING EDITH KUTTNER (JUNE 18, 1916-JULY 5, 2003)
Last year’s HALT Spring Conference: Connecting Communities
& Classrooms, was dedicated to Edith Kuttner, who was a Spanish
teacher, an active HALT member, executive board officer, and a tireless
foreign language education advocate. Her warm presence and inspiring
dedication to world language education will be greatly missed.
The following are various colleagues’ remembrances of her
and her impact inHawai‘i: “Edith held Masters degrees
in Spanish language teaching from both Columbia University and theUniversity
of Hawai‘i. She taught Spanish at the East Meadow High School
in New York for 20 years (from 1958-78). Concurrently, she taught
at Post College of Long Island University. In 1979, she and her
husband, Milton, moved toHawai‘i, and Edith began a 10-year
career at the Star of the Sea High School, ending as department
chair. After her retirement from there, she worked for a number
of years as Curriculum Coordinatoron the Asian Language Grant Program
at Chaminade University. At the time of her death,she was president
of Teleclass International, a non-profit organization dedicated
to preserving heritage languages. Of the latter Edith wrote ‘After
retirement from the classroom, my special interest is the maintenance
of heritage languages in Hawai‘i. At Teleclass, we offer heritage
language students the opportunity to communicate with their peers
around the world via videoconferences.’ “In addition
to her full-time career commitments, Edith took the time to serve
as president of HALT from 1985-87. In this capacity, she organized
its first Conference in 1985, held at the University of Hawai‘i
and Brigham Young University. “Edith was a loving and devoted
wife, mother, mother-in-law, grandmother, great grandmother, friend,
and educator. She was an extremely giving person who strived for
excellence throughout her life. A social butterfly and world traveler,
she was dedicated and committed to language arts studies.”
(contributed by Cyndy Ning) “Edith was forward-thinking and
passionateabout making foreign languages part of the regular curriculum
for Hawai‘i’s public school students. She had the early
foresight and was instrumental in establishing FLES, ForeignLanguages
in the Elementary School. She was the driving force behind presentations
before the Board of Education in the mid 1980s, where professors
and classroom teachers made a case for the need for FL in the early
grades. The result was a State Mandate for FLES in the schools.
Subsequent to that mandate, principals in Honolulu District made
the program a voluntary one (the present AEPL program),citing lack
of teachers and resources as the deterrents. She spent countless
hours at BOE meetings and in task forces to ignite a spark for foreign
languages in the DOE schools. She also sought to promote articulation
among all levelsof foreign language learning. Her most recentprojects
involved promoting heritage languages, providing different groups
with the opportunityto continue study in their language in after
school or weekend programs.” (contributed by Hazel Hasegawa)
EDITH E is for energy, positive and boundlessenergy to be involved
D is for dedication, dedicated towhatever she believed in
I is for inspiration, an inspiration toall World Languages educators
T is for tireless, her tireless efforts onbehalf of language learners
andteachers
H is for Hope, her unending hope thatall her efforts be realized
Edith Kuttner’s dedication and effortson behalf of languages
will live on. (contributed by Lynette Fujimori)
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