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SY 21-22 Brings Many Opportunities for Gratitude In the Form of PBA Alumni Employees 

Dear Readers of the What's New, 

I am in a teacher appreciation frame of mind these days. Of course, I am always grateful for the efforts of the teachers at PBA – I have worked with several for more than a decade and look forward to many future years of work advancing the school’s mission of enlightened learning with them.

Today, though, my focus narrows to the group of alumni PBA has working at the school, from

recently graduated members of the Class of 2021 who assist me in the Main Office, to adjunct faculty teaching in the Performing Arts & Communication strand of our electives program, to the newest alumni faculty employed as full-time teachers educating students in our core humanities, math, and science lines.

We meet as a team of educators during the week and for in-service trainings regularly. I think you can imagine my distinct pleasure facilitating those discussions to hear PBA alumni talk about how to best work with individual students, grade level cohorts, and advisories from the perspective of teachers. “I really love when that kid speaks up in class because he approaches the material so differently,” one confided with me recently during an off-campus lunch.

Teaching isn’t always a walk in the park with any age group, let alone teens. Keeping the students engaged throughout the week, first thing in the morning, before and after lunch is a labor of love.

But watching these previous students work to lead our community as teachers is really gratifying. The PBA alumni teachers understand the school’s values, participated in many of the same programs they now lead, and identify with the challenges their students face since they wore their shoes not long ago.

We have featured all of these alumni in previous issues of the What’s New, but I will give you the rundown on their areas of responsibility as PBA employees.

Chris Knight and Lia Sutton are graduates of PBA’s Class of 2021. They were excellent, organized students and effective peers. As a student, Chris competed on a co-op tennis team with Maryknoll School for four consecutive years. As one of two office assistants and coach of PBA’s first e-sports team, Chris is known for his deejay-smooth voice on the school intercom and his reliable oversight of the e-sports team into the championship tournament for Super Smash Brothers.

Lia, along with Class of 2020 alum Emily Axt, was one of two students that pitched the Social Committee to me when they were students with the goal of enriching the school’s social events calendar. With their planning support and leadership, we launched the Friday Night Socials program and were able to resume those evening social activities with the student body even during the pandemic. We look forward to next Thursday’s Winter Ball planned by this year’s senior class the Class of 2022, facilitated by none other than Lia.

Zach Agcaoili is a Class 2014 alum who teaches Intro to Drama, Beginning Taiko and Conversational Korean as part of our electives program. He has taught at PBA for four years. A former lead member of PBA’s elite performance taiko group Hyaku Sen Ki Kai Taiko, Zach Sensei is responsible for identifying emerging taiko talents from his beginning groups (those that have not already been identified from the Hongwanji Mission School Taiko Program) and motivating them to excel in that character developing performance medium.

Brandon Nitta is a Class of 2014 grad leading the balance of our music classes. He teaches Music Appreciation, a required elective for ninth graders meant to introduce them to the medium, Beginning and Advanced Guitar, and Rock Band. Brandon, as it turns out, was one of a few students who pitched the Rock Band class to Head of School Emeritus Pieper Toyama. And as a music teacher, Mr. Nitta is something of a pied piper himself. He has more than a few students who jam with him after school on a regular basis, and we look forward to hearing them play at next week’s Winter Ball.

Paris Hitchcock is a Class of 2013 alum working in tandem with the teachers overseeing PBA’s senior year, inquiry and project-based curriculum known as the PeaceBridge Project. She is also simultaneously pursuing her Masters of Education at UH Mānoa, which gives her the unique opportunity to reflect with her students on the expectations and design of graduate level work – the same sorts of challenges we hope many PBA alum will pursue – and on the challenges of being a high school senior at PBA. Paris was a senior when I still ran the senior year program at PBA, and I am especially excited to co-teach a Social and Cultural Anthropology segment of PeaceBridge in spring 2022.

Finally, Lisa Roerk is an alum of PBA’s Class of 2014 that graduated from Oregon State University with a degree in Zoology, emulating in no small part the academic pathway of PBA’s other Life Sciences teacher Van Velasco. While I lament, as an Oregon Duck, that U of Oregon lost out in the recruiting competition to bring Ms. Lisa to our campus, I pat myself on the back that she teaches math at all levels and Wilderness Survival and Conservation in our electives program. We look forward to engaging her skills set in the science classroom next year.

In sum, I want to say how gratifying it is again to work with these young teachers who shared the halls with us as students and share them again as teachers. It is a very fine indicator of the long-term benefits of PBA’s educational program, and it warms my heart. I express my gratitude to PBA’s teachers of the past, present and future for the important work that you do.

Warmly,
Josh

PBA Class of 2016 Alumna Talissa Wright Pursues Her Passion as a Director and Producer

Traveling around the country, producing an award-winning film, and launching an independent film production company, are just a few aspects of Pacific Buddhist Academy alumna Talissa Wright’s career. Graduating earlier this year from Savannah College of Art and Design with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in film and television and minor in photography, Talissa has packed her schedule with a variety of exciting projects.

Talissa’s most recent work as an accounting assistant for a film called Bucher’s Crossing, took her to Montana. “It was my first time getting to travel for a film and we had to travel across the state to film all the different scenes. My accounting mentor plans to bring me onto a few more projects so I will be traveling to Los Angeles in January to work on a network series - though I’m not allowed to reveal more details than that!” said Talissa.

Wander directed by LeAnn Schmitt, was the first animation that Talissa worked on as a producer. The film won Best Character Based Short at the Los Angeles Animation Festival and Best Animated Short at the IndieX Film Fest.

Talissa’s part-time job is as a social media and marketing manager on an indie fighting game called Drag Her. “This is a super neat experience for me, as I’m able to get the chance to wet my feet in the gaming world,” said Talissa. “For this gig, my main job is to focus on growing social media followers through post design and updates.”

In June, Talissa launched an independent film production company called Wright Angle Productions (WAP). She says launching her own company opens up a whole new world of possibilities.

SenpEYES, a comedic infomercial parody, will be the first film made under the WAP name. “SenpEYES stars puppets and utilizes elements of both slapstick and surrealist humor. In the film, young Ping Pong laments over how he can’t find a girlfriend. Everything changes with the help of a sick new body mod: SenpEYES,” explained Talissa.

When asked how the idea for SenpEYES came about, Talissa said, “My best friend suffered from a severe concussion this year and the medication she took for it caused her to have extremely vivid dreams. She had a dream about puppets with anime eyes and immediately called me. She works at Cartoon Network, so she was already starting to form different gags and scenarios. We immediately sprung into action, hitting up friends who were costume designers, prop builders, composers, etc. In less than a month, we had assembled our entire team and were ready to start preproduction!

Talissa hopes that WAP’s portfolio will eventually lead her to connect with businesses and influences she’d like to collaborate with. When her schedule gets busy, Talissa reminds herself of the importance of enjoying the creative experience. “Anytime I find myself too stressed out over a project, I remember my PBA film days and why I went into this weird career path in the first place,” said Talissa. “We used to get special permission from a handful of our teachers to replace final projects/tests with final films if it fit certain requirements. The teachers really respected those requests, and it ultimately helped to solidify the idea that I wanted to make movies for a living.”

Looking forward, Talissa said, “It’s cool working on a big movie or a series, but the control and intimacy you find on smaller films is my favorite.”

PBA congratulates Talissa on her many successes looks forward to the primer of SenpEYES. For information on Talissa’s films and projects, visit https://www.talissawright.com/

Student Activity


Students participate in a beach clean up 


Freshman created wind and string instruments in physics class

Important Dates

December 8 - Virtual Admissions Open House
December 9 - Winter Ball 
December 10 - Office Closed (Teacher-in-service Day) 
December 13 - Winter Holiday, Office Hours 8am - 3pm 

1754 Lusitana Street, Honolulu, HI 96813
(808) 532-2649

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