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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Thursday, December 1, 2005

OUR SCHOOLS | KAHALU'U ELEMENTARY
Students find standards-based learning easier

By Eloise Aguiar
Advertiser Windward O'ahu Writer

Second-graders, from left, Hope Fernandez-Camara, Yvonne Trujillo and Makana Hurr research dinosaurs in Kahalu'u Elementary School's library. The school has 210 students.

RICHARD AMBO | The Honolulu Advertiser

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AT A GLANCE

Where: 47-280 Waihe'e Road, Kahalu'u

Phone: 239-3101

Principal: Amy Arakaki, four years

School nickname: None, but its logo is the Ko'olau Range and taro fields

School colors: Forest green and gold

History: The school opened in 1963 with eight teachers and approximately 218 students in kindergarten to fifth grade. By the 1970s, with suburban development on the rise, enrollment swelled to 700 until 'Ahuimanu Elementary School opened. Since then, enrollment has dropped. Today, 210 students attend the school built for 500.

Testing: Here's how Kahalu'u Elementary pupils fared on the most recent standardized tests:

  • Stanford Achievement Test: Listed is the combined percentage of pupils scoring average and above average, compared with the national combined average of 77 percent. Third-grade reading, 76 percent; math, 83 percent. Fifth-grade reading, 60 percent; math, 86 percent.

  • Hawai'i State Assessment: Listed is the combined percentage of pupils meeting or exceeding state standards, and a comparison with the state average. Third-grade reading, 45 percent, compared with state average of 51.8 percent; math, 33 percent, compared with 28.5 percent. Fifth-grade reading, 27 percent, compared with state average of 55.6 percent; math, 6 percent, compared with 25.5 percent.

    Computers: 60

    Enrollment: 210, preschool to sixth grade

    Low-income enrollment: 69 percent

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    KAHALU'U — At Kahalu'u Elementary School, students know what is expected to earn a good grade, which they said is clearly spelled out in the standards that the state has adopted for all public schools.

    "(Learning) is easier because you know what to do so you can study ahead of time and learn ahead of time," said sixth-grader Joshua Patberg, adding that the mystery to earning a good grade is taken away with the new standards.

    Students also know what a teacher wants, said Pene Kaonohi, a fourth-grader. "I understand better. It's pretty easy."

    Kahalu'u is immersed in standards-based learning and the response from the children is positive, said school principal Amy Arakaki. In every assignment and activity, the students are told what they must accomplish and how they can achieve the highest score for their work. Sometimes they get to redo an assignment to improve it, Arakaki said.

    "They know up front what is expected," she said, pointing to the standards that are posted in each classroom for each subject. "And there's no such thing as averaging."

    Preschoolers to sixth-grade students know what to do and must work throughout the year to receive a good final grade, Arakaki said, adding that as the school year progresses, the concepts are harder so students must build on their knowledge to move forward.

    All grades are backed by a compilation of schoolwork that is kept in a binder in the student's room. The teacher's assessment is there, as are the student's self-evaluation and peer comments. And there's lots of discussion and time spent on reflecting, she said.

  • What are you most proud of? The spirit of 'ohana at the school and throughout the community.

  • Best-kept secret: The Kahalu'u 'ohana, which includes churches, service groups and agencies, community volunteers, retired teachers and school staff and teachers, who work together in the spirit of aloha to improve students' lives, help them learn and become responsible citizens.

  • Everybody at our school knows: Nora Takeno, school food services manager, who helps with school and other fundraisers, cooks free dinners for the school community that are sponsored by others, provides low-cost meals on movie night, opens her kitchen to lessons and teaches students about home economics in an after-school program. Once a year, she plans a breakfast with Santa just for the students and uses money she raised all year to purchase gifts for each child, Arakaki said. Once she learned that a student needed a wheelchair, so she held a fundraiser, she said.

    "She has a heart for the community," Arakaki said. "She says she just wants to make school a happy place."

  • Our biggest challenge: Involving parents and getting them to value education.

  • What we need: More parent and community participation.

  • Projects: Katrina Comforting Coins, in which students, teachers and parents raised and contributed more than $1,700 to hurricane victims; the after-school Homework Club; monthly free movies for the family; Book and Breakfast, in which a volunteer reads to the students while they eat, and First Night Before School, in which student and families meet the teachers, get a free meal and learn more about services available in their community on the night before school begins for the year.

  • Special events: Castle Performing Arts Center will produce "The Music Man Junior," and students from the school will perform Feb. 24 to 26.

    Reach Eloise Aguiar at eaguiar@honoluluadvertiser.com.