Program Details
Location: Kona, Hawaii
Dates: Summer 2025: June 22-July 6, 2025
Applications: Accepted on a rolling admission basis
Accommodations: Primarily camping
Credits: 5 quarter credits or 3.35 semester credits
Language: English instruction
Courses: Environmental Field Survey
Prerequisites: One college level course in environmental studies, environmental science, ecology or similar. 18 years of age
Program Costs
Hawaii Summer 2025
$ 150 Application Fee
$ 2,800 Program Fee
$ 1,500 Group Logistics Fee
$ 900 Estimated Airfare and Mandatory Travel Insurance
$ 100 Estimated Personal Expenses
$ 5,450 Total Estimated Cost
Summer 2025: Program fees due by May 1, 2025
The Program
Join us on one of the planet’s most remote archipelagos: the Hawaiian Islands. This island chain is among the most geologically active and ecologically fascinating island systems, with a rich history of traditional management and knowledge systems. This unique opportunity allows students to conduct scientific investigations of Hawai’i’s ecosystems, visit and learn about unique sites, and learn from local people deep in the heart of the islands, off the ‘beaten path’ that most tourists take.
The program will take place on the Big Island of Hawaii and examine “mai ka ʻāina a ke kai”, Hawaiian for “from the land to the sea”. Hawaiian peoples, and many Pacific Island peoples, recognize the critical link between land and sea, and the importance of managing them together with linked knowledge systems.
Our program titled “Marine Management” emphasizes marine conservation, focusing on the Kona coast of Hawaii. In this unique program, our team will examine the differences and intersections between indigenous marine management and western marine management. We will concentrate on specific coral reef field surveys and research methods, collecting and analyzing data from protected and unprotected coastal areas. Students on this marine conservation program will earn 5-quarter credits of ESCI 437B: Environmental Field Survey credits, through demonstrated knowledge and success in the use of research techniques and methods for surveying reefs (on snorkel), collection data on ecologically important fish and corals inside and outside protected areas, and a gained understanding about traditional and contemporary management. Our team will also explore the coastal and forest environments to broaden our perspective on the connectivity of these iconic ecosystems.
Bursting with diversity and boundless opportunities for field studies, students who join us will depart the Big Island with a deep understanding of marine environments, oceanographic processes, geological activity that has formed and shaped the Hawaiian Islands, and a deeper understanding of the traditional management systems that have stewarded these islands for millennia.
More Details
Syllabus
Manual
Dawn A. Murray
Lead instructor
PhD in Ocean Sciences, UC Santa Cruz, 2005
Dawn is a marine biologist with expertise in global ecosystem conservation. She has worked through various avenues to promote conservation initiatives, contribute to biodiversity monitoring, advocate for Indigenous Voices and the incorporation of Indigenous values into land management practices, and instill climate change resiliency into conservation planning. Her efforts have included co-creating the LiMPETS program to monitor rocky intertidal zones and sandy beaches within NOAA’s National Marine Sanctuaries Program, serving as an educational advisor to the Northern Chumash Tribal Council, and supporting the designation of the Chumash Heritage National Marine Sanctuary, the first sanctuary to be Tribally nominated. Dawn is an experienced field educator, having led courses in the Galapagos, Bhutan, Costa Rica, Mexico, and Central California, and she currently works as a professor of Environmental Studies in California. Dawn leads our Hawaii program.