Partners In Development Foundation


Partners in Development Foundation, an IRS Section 501 non-profit public foundation, was incorporated in 1997 in Honolulu, Hawaiʻi. It has established and implemented programs in the areas of education, social services, Hawaiian culture, Hawaiian language, and preservation of the natural environment and traditional Hawaiian agriculture. These programs now have served close to ten thousand people in communities throughout Hawai‘i. In 2011, PIDF received grants 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.

Programs

Education

  1. Mālama Mobile - A “first contact” homeless outreach that provides a modified center-based preschool experience for at-risk families near coastal beach parks and homeless families living at beach parks. Families receive canned and dried goods as well as educational and social services with partners from local shelters, outreach and government agencies. Adult educational services include goal-setting, budgeting, vocational training, job placement and GED preparation. Ninety-five percent of the families served are Native Hawaiian.
  2. Traveling Preschool - A parent-child participatory preschool that provides services at two family shelters on the Leeward Coast. The two-hour-a-day, two-day-a-week program provides pre- and post-testing, portfolio assessment, referrals for health and developmental needs through community partners, parenting classes and TANF education. Adult educational services include goal-setting, budgeting, vocational training, job placement and GED preparation. The curriculum of the preschool meets the Hawai‘i Preschool Content Standards and the “Learning to Grow” Infant and Toddler Development standards.
  3. Family Education Services - A four-hour-a-day, four-day-a-week comprehensive Family Education Service is offered at transitional shelters. Parents interact with their child for the first two hours of the program, then participate in various adult education and life skills programs while their children receive an intensive, developmentally appropriate education through preschool teachers and assistants. Adult educational services include goal-setting, budgeting, vocational training, job placement, and GED preparation.
  4. ‘Ike No‘eau - A traveling preschool program provides developmentally appropriate, culturally relevant math and science preschool curriculum to families at the shelters and at Hawaiian Homelands in Wai‘anae and Waimānalo.
  5. Ke Kama Pono - A Safe House program that services a maximum of 12 adjudicated youth, ages 13–17, for six to nine months with follow-up monitoring by the program for three years. On site classes are held by DOE certified teachers in order to assist the youth in maintaining school credits. Additionally, the residents take part in monthly team meetings with case managers, probation officers, and parent/guardians to evaluate resident treatment and service plans. The Ke Kama Pono program embeds Native Hawaiian values throughout its activities, functions, and mentorships. Residents work three times a week at the Mountain View Dairy, and twice a week they engage in activities at the Boys and Girls Clubs of America. Weekend activities vary from outdoor recreation to performing community service. The emphasis on parent and family involvement is an important aspect of the program. Parent/guardians are required to attend monthly parenting classes which help to ensure a successful family reunification process. The Safe House program differs from many other residential programs because of the holistic approach in addressing all areas of need of the residents, including their family dynamics.