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The February issue of Robot Magazine details the progress of robotics clubs at Yap Catholic High School and the SDA School in Yap, Micronesia.

The article explains how Yap State’s two private high schools have announced an innovative new pro- gram to serve students with an interest in math and computers. The schools, Yap SDA and Yap Catholic, are each establishing robotics teams for their pupils. These student teams, with support from teachers and other school staffers, will design, build and operate basic robots. Both teams have been equipped with classroom robotics kits from VEX Robotics.

The Habele Outer Island Education Fund donated the kits along with teacher guides and the equipment required for using desktop computers to program the robots.

A prominent VEX Robotics team based at the Chaminade College Preparatory high school in West Hills, California, Eagle Engineering Team #1138, is at the root of this story.


In 2008, Eagle Engineering began sending textbooks from all academic disciplines to Micronesia to help build up resources for two new high schools. Eagle Engineering sent the texts to Father Corcoran, director and principal Yap Catholic high school on the island of Yap. Corcoran used the texts to build libraries for the school and shared the donations with other public and private schools in Yap State.. The book program was launched by former Chaminade student Amelia Weiss, a team alumni who is now at the University of California, Berkeley majoring in marine biology and engineering.

In the last year, Eagle Engineering began creating instructional videos for the Micronesian students, as well. These videos cover robotics basics, programming and more. In recent months, the team sent two VEX Robotics Starter Kits to the students, as well as a VEX game playing field and game elements. From the beginning, the Habele Outer Island Education Fund, a philanthropic foundation, provided funding for Eagle Engineering to make this outreach possible.


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February 28, 2012 No comments

Canoes are being carved in Gargey, Yap.

The program is a joint effort of "Waagey," a Yap based community organization, and Habele, a U.S. based charity serving students across Micronesia since 2006.

One of the more experience canoe builders from Lamotrek named Xavier and the navigator, Ali, have come to support young men from Lamotrek and other Outer Islands who now live on Yap Proper complete the project.



The project leaders feel that young people from Lamotrek who have been living in Yap their whole lives are Outer Islanders in name only. Those young men and women struggle with the basic skills traditional required for village and family life. The groups's vision is to use instruction in traditional skills to build a sense of identiy and accomplishment among these youth.

More great photos here.

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February 21, 2012 No comments


Habele directors and volunteers have been working to support young men from the Atoll of Lamotrek living on Yap Proper. Yap is the state capital of one of four states in the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM). A club was organized in November of 2011, with weekly meetings in Gargey. The group has set itself very ambitious goals.

Working with elders from the Outer Island community on Yap, club members have put coconuts husks to sea, which will be ready for local twine rope making by early 2012. They also started carving a mid size traditional dugout canoe, building towards the goal of initiating the creation a second, much larger canoe by mid 2012. Habele donors will help bear the costs of sending traditional building materials and tools from Lamotrek to Yap and back on the state owned cargo ship to facilitate the process.


The islanders participating understand that Neighboring Island migration to the center (Yap Proper and the other four state capitals) continues to grow at a staggering rate. Most often, children and grandchildren of these migrants do not experience the typical Outer Island men's house experiences. The result is both a concrete loss of specific and specialized skills passed down through such meetings, and the distinctive Outer Island cultural identity that flow from them.




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February 10, 2012 No comments
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