As someone who worked for 40+ years in the DOE, I think I can clarify a few things about GE, particularly high school. The number one reason and best way to obtain a GE is having your child enroll in a program at the target school that your home school does not offer. One of the top program reasons is music. Generally speaking, the "better" high schools offer orchestra which many schools do not. This is different from band which most schools have. So, if you're thinking ahead, from small kid time, get your child violin (viola, cello, bass) lessons! Another good reason is video production, though a lot of schools are starting to create them nowadays. Also, foreign language is a good way. Say your child wants to learn French, but home school only offers Japanese and Spanish (common in most HS). An interesting way is through ROTC. Many schools offer ROTC, but only a certain branch. So for example, if your child wants AIR FORCE, but the home school offers ARMY, that's another way. Finally, some schools have academies such as health care or culinary. Academies are a great way to obtain a GE. The school I was at was 20 miles away from home, but it was a good school compared to our home school. I could have used the staff excuse (which is technically not a good reason, but everyone does it), but I didn't want people "talking," so I got my kids GE's legitimately through orchestra. Yes, it was a little expensive for private lessons, but well worth it. I agree with those who said it doesn't matter which school your child attends as long as they have parents who truly care, but there is some difference in school climate and the other students your child will have to deal with where your wonderful caring means nothing if there's a lot of gang violence and/or bullying.
Mahalo for the insight. I heard Moanalua has a great music program and that a lot of kids get GEs because of that program. I believe we used business classes as a reason to get me into McKinley at the time. Took one year of business classes as electives and that was it.
Love the video and you bringing light to this subject. I went to school in the 80s and dont remember GEs at all. I was raised in a notorious town on Oahu that was not known as a hotbed of educational excellence, but I felt (and still feel) a big part of a child’s success is their own desire to achieve; there are so many opportunities outside the geographic school your child “should” go to (especially now in the digital age) that a good, solid education is achievable for all. Regaring the public v. private issue, I had a friend who attended our local public high school (again, not a very sought-after or highly-regarded school) who did everything possible while there; academics, athletics, student government, community service; a totally, extremely well-rounded (gifted, even) teen. I’d match her schooling to that acquired at any private school (including my own alma matet) any day, any time. What matters most is what your child does with the opportunities available, whether they be opportunities their school can offer or those the student/their parents pursue outside of school. Great vid!
There was GE long ago but I think a lot was used for safety. We had a military family live near us and their son got into a fight on the first day of school because he didn’t fit in with the local students. Their family opted for GE to Radford which was a better fit for him and his siblings.
I think they used to call it District Exception. But I talked to my dad about this and he doesn't remember too many kids attending schools outside the district when we grew up. Very different now that both parents need to work and people commute a lot.
You mentioned about five educational factors (i.e. teachers, facilities, programs, etc...), and I'd like to add 'student'. My nephews attended schools through GE, and they turned out 'average'. Although their sister attended a high school that might be thought of as average, and she's the only college graduate out of the three. And in another example, I knew a girl that graduated from Kalani HS, and she ended up getting a scholarship to Harvard. So a big factor is the student, and how they apply themselves to their studies. Like I always believed, "gas is like knowledge, the more gas you have in your tank, the further you can go in life".
Thanks for adding "student" to an important factor in education. And I had several classmates that went on to elite colleges, even though McKinley isn't considered one of the top schools.
I went to Kaimuki hi in the 60’s. The English and math standards that I graduated with were low academically but I was labeled college bound. Somehow, I managed to get a masters degree in Education in a reputable college on the mainland. Many in my classroom did well. Now? Kaimuki may be different.
GE could also help schools in areas where there is a lack of younger children, ie. Hawaii Kai and Manoa, attract students from areas where there has been an explosive increase of younger children, ie. Ewa. That way, those school without a large base of students would be able to stay open while taking the pressure off of schools where there has been a sudden increase in the younger population.
GEs help with spreading out student populations and schools that would struggle to keep enrollment up. It's just interesting that the areas that you mentioned struggle to have kids in proximity to those schools. Are the kids that are growing up in those areas going to private school? Does that have that much of an impact?
GE are sometimes just a necessity. When my wife and I worked in town and we lived in Ewa Beach. There was no way we could have our kid go to an Ewa Beach school and be able to pick her up on time. I never had a GE when I was a kid, but it really helped me with my kid. And our education system here needs a lot of improvements. Go Tigers!
CHRIS Thank You every Child should be offered by the Department of Education a Fair Deal ! SCHOOL should be Free for all Children! I SAY in we’ll Hawaii it should have Agriculture and Tech available for Any Children!
This is a catch 22. It is more likely that smart school administrators listened to their parents and started to provide the requested services causing other parents to consolidate at those schools. Offer the services and the students will come. Forcing the other direction will only mean you have fights for specific housing that is already at a premium to be in district for a desired school.
I'd hope that each of the schools provides unique things that make it stand out. I noticed a lot of the "better" school provide Japanese language programs. If it's something that families want, maybe other schools can start providing that as well.
@@HelloFromHawaii No, my question did not refer to the availability of public transit, sorry. It referred to this: : The transporting of children to a school outside their residential area as a means of achieving racial balance in that school.
@@SuiGenerisAbbieI used to take public transportation busses to school. I remember, my brother was trip trained by my mom to go 3 different busses to his school. He was 6 years old.
Chris I love your Work it Education is for Parents who have Demographic INSTABILITY BUT the DEPARTMENT OF Education should allow all the options of OPERATION! BASED on not Income!
What is your opinion on trumps Education plan? Correct me if I am wrong but he is advocating for ‘School Choice’ which I believe gets rid of GE? And what is your opinion on Trump wanting to get rid of the DOE? Thanks
I agree. Education is currently run by each state. That's why there are School Boards. The federal government just doles out tax money to the states. If parents had a choice there would be competition to be the best which makes or breaks a school.
I haven't reviewed Trump's education plan so I can't comment on specifics. However, if all parents had a choice on where to send kids to school in Hawaii, it would be interesting to see where kids end up and how the schools react. I'd think that some schools would get overwhelmed and others would shrink and lose critical funding.
The Republicans push for school vouchers. Meaning the state would give you a voucher u could take to a prive school. Help u pay for the tuition. However like Arizona learned alot of poor people couldnt use the vouchers because it wouldnt cover all the expenses of a private school, also if it wasnt close they couldnt get their child to the school. So it just pulled money away from public schools and handed it to the rich who were going \to send their kids to private anyway.
Many variables to think about: Children's background: GT, Special Needs, Sports, Curriculum School Demographics: Title I schools are schools that receive federal funding to support students from low-income families. Versus non Title I: More fund raising maybe involved Teacher's background- Highly Qualified background School background- Blue Ribbon Private school may have Teacher's background different Private school tuition may be expensive
Been there, done that. Feel bad that my kids high test scores were given to their GE school rather than their district school. I didn’t have any issues with our school district but first, their C- grade from Hawaii Pacific Business magazine made us check if we had other options. Second, we just lived too far for my daughter to walk to school and we didn’t know about the school bus but even if we knew about the school bus it was still scary to let my little kid wait at the remote dark bus stop in the morning or have her catch bus home by herself and wait until 6pm for the parents to get home. I think we got GE because first the kids had an aunty nearby the GE school should there be an emergency. Second, my work was near the school so I could get them when they needed to leave during school and after school. Third, probably most important is that I said I could help the school because of my work location and I put my money where my mouth was and volunteered a lot with school activities and fundraising. In hindsight a bunch of Hawaii public schools do offer a lot to students but I think it takes effort on the students to be aggressive in finding the educational opportunities and it takes will power for students to push themselves to achieve when 1/2 of the students are not disciplined to prepare themselves for college. Also,I think puberty in general plays major mind games on teenagers and I don’t know the solution on solving the teenager phase of rebellion and confusion. Before anyone complains about Hawaii public schools, my son’s classmate attended Waipahu High School and he got accepted into Harvard. WHS offered all the hard college classes and all the AP classes so they did offer all that is needed to get into any American university. It’s up to the students to take advantage of what is offered.
Thanks for sharing what happened with your kids. I think it's great that you volunteered with school activities. And yes, kids get into colleges from public and private schools.
You are in my area, so you are probably kaahumanu, which definitely get an exception. Wilson is pretty good, I'm fortunately to send mines to a private school, but would consider wilson if they couldn't get in.
I have my daughter in Waikiki elementary school. This is her second year there. TBH I think Wai’alae charter is better, more sense of community and staff are more approachable, plus their academics and curriculum are nicer and their events are way better. I wish I can change her but she has made lot of friends and is closer to home. I have friends with their kids in Noelani and they said the school is great but traffic can be terrible when getting into Manoa. But if there’s a way I can get her to UH Lab I’ll definitely transfer her. Btw, with Trump in power next 🤮 and treating to end the DOE, how you think Hawai’i public schools will be affected?
I've heard great things about Waikiki. I also heard about the Noelani traffic. I'm not sure how Hawaii schools will be affected by the new administration. Maybe funding issues?
My kiddo was at Waikiki too, and I was not impressed with the school at all. There were 4 different teacher in kindergarten and the 1st grade teacher was notorious for yelling and being super strict. There was a lack of communication and we never felt supported with specific education needs. I'm looking to get my kid to private school if possible
Fortunately, GE is available. It's unfortunate that there are schools that's a big no for those able to see through the weeds. I was in public school throughout and did ok. And yes, it's what you put in that you get out of it. Parent support and involvement are critical, but sad to say there seems to be more...my child is right, and you teacher are wrong.
THANK YOU MAHOLO kids need Center of Interest of Information! SCIENCE, Math and THE also ENVIRONMENTAL ! ARGUING the Fact Agriculture Schools needs 2 in Hawaii!
I like your theory of hey what happen if all our kids go to the base home school if we can balance it out? Send your kids den😂 no really i hope your kids get into good schools. Just watching this is beinging me stressful memories.
We left Hawaii so that our children could get a better education. For the most part, you need to go private in Hawaii. Hard to say you live in Paradise when life is so hard.
School is what the student, parents and faculty make of it. Leaving Hawaii solely for a child's education is a pretty expensive route to justify just for one child. I remember when I was a teen working part time at the supermarket, still in high school and I knew guys going to private school from work. It was a private school, they did not seem like they were at the academically top of the list at the school, one guy even mentioned that they were working to see who the worst in their class could be. I find it hard to justify relocating just for one or more kids' education. If it gave the parents an higher wage, better benefits, opportunities to rise and do career wise, as well as buying a home. All of those things are long term benefits for the family, whereas, if the child gets a good education but ends up doing what they choose in a career, any student in a public school could do or worse, then it seems, it was a move that wasn't beneficial to the family. I had a neighbor couple work in town, commute to Kailua, had 3 beautiful, smart, talented daughters who could easily, have gone to private school or one in town, but all three daughters, were top students, the first two might have been valedictorians, but at least National Merit students with high GPA. The third daughter while not top, but near to the top. All three had colleges on the mainland, two attended MIT. The parents were proud of all three daughters. Opportunity, individuality and perseverance is something that attending the best doesn't mean much, if they don't maximize the opportunity.
Same. You have to toughen your kids up for public schools. And the only way we got a geographic exception from Central to Washington was because we knew somebody. But even Washington Middle School was horrendous. We moved out of state ! Just for her education alone and to save her future
I am military. Daughter graduated from Kapolei HS back in 2020. 3 classmates got into Harvard. My boys went to Leilehua HS. Barely any real difference except much newer, nicer facilities at Kapolei. Students still got accepted to Harvard and Princeton. My neighbors kids go to Mililani HS... What stands out is that they literally seek out the best students in terms of sports, academics, and extra curriculars just so they can sell that they are a better school to everyone. Only athletes seemingly have a leg up based on my experience. Academics and college acceptance is all about individual student effort. During COVID, 20k a year tuition private schools put kids on Khan Academy. Meanwhile, Hawaii DOE created online virtual lessons for public school students. Private schools do not teach kids tolerance and acceptance - it teaches them that you can pay more for status. Learning is 100% between individual teachers, parents, and students. Moving away from Hawaii for education is silly. Every one told me when I was assigned here that my kids would be dumber and the schools sucked. Then my daughter was in a robotics class where they were doing a project that a MIT Student did a Masters level project on and failed to create it himself. My special needs son started to thrive. And I experienced little difference between public schools in D.C. and here except my kids were happier and felt safer in them. If it makes you feel better to pay more to increase your child's marketability or you want them to be boarded without directly parenting them - pay for private. But in terms of education differences, I would never encourage someone to pay more for barely any difference in quality of education and less exposure to the actual community that they will ultimately live and work in later.
I don't think that students need private school. I'm sure that many families would prefer that route, but there are a lot of successful people who went to public school and there are many benefits that often get overlooked in public education in Hawaii.
Good luck to all of the parents going through this process 🤙
@@HelloFromHawaii kids deserve the best
As someone who worked for 40+ years in the DOE, I think I can clarify a few things about GE, particularly high school. The number one reason and best way to obtain a GE is having your child enroll in a program at the target school that your home school does not offer.
One of the top program reasons is music. Generally speaking, the "better" high schools offer orchestra which many schools do not. This is different from band which most schools have. So, if you're thinking ahead, from small kid time, get your child violin (viola, cello, bass) lessons! Another good reason is video production, though a lot of schools are starting to create them nowadays. Also, foreign language is a good way. Say your child wants to learn French, but home school only offers Japanese and Spanish (common in most HS). An interesting way is through ROTC. Many schools offer ROTC, but only a certain branch. So for example, if your child wants AIR FORCE, but the home school offers ARMY, that's another way. Finally, some schools have academies such as health care or culinary. Academies are a great way to obtain a GE.
The school I was at was 20 miles away from home, but it was a good school compared to our home school. I could have used the staff excuse (which is technically not a good reason, but everyone does it), but I didn't want people "talking," so I got my kids GE's legitimately through orchestra. Yes, it was a little expensive for private lessons, but well worth it. I agree with those who said it doesn't matter which school your child attends as long as they have parents who truly care, but there is some difference in school climate and the other students your child will have to deal with where your wonderful caring means nothing if there's a lot of gang violence and/or bullying.
Mahalo for the insight. I heard Moanalua has a great music program and that a lot of kids get GEs because of that program. I believe we used business classes as a reason to get me into McKinley at the time. Took one year of business classes as electives and that was it.
Love the video and you bringing light to this subject. I went to school in the 80s and dont remember GEs at all. I was raised in a notorious town on Oahu that was not known as a hotbed of educational excellence, but I felt (and still feel) a big part of a child’s success is their own desire to achieve; there are so many opportunities outside the geographic school your child “should” go to (especially now in the digital age) that a good, solid education is achievable for all. Regaring the public v. private issue, I had a friend who attended our local public high school (again, not a very sought-after or highly-regarded school) who did everything possible while there; academics, athletics, student government, community service; a totally, extremely well-rounded (gifted, even) teen. I’d match her schooling to that acquired at any private school (including my own alma matet) any day, any time. What matters most is what your child does with the opportunities available, whether they be opportunities their school can offer or those the student/their parents pursue outside of school.
Great vid!
There was GE long ago but I think a lot was used for safety. We had a military family live near us and their son got into a fight on the first day of school because he didn’t fit in with the local students. Their family opted for GE to Radford which was a better fit for him and his siblings.
I think they used to call it District Exception. But I talked to my dad about this and he doesn't remember too many kids attending schools outside the district when we grew up. Very different now that both parents need to work and people commute a lot.
Your sons will be fine wherever they go because they have caring and involved parents.
Thank you. We'll try our best to support them wherever they may go.
You mentioned about five educational factors (i.e. teachers, facilities, programs, etc...), and I'd like to add 'student'. My nephews attended schools through GE, and they turned out 'average'. Although their sister attended a high school that might be thought of as average, and she's the only college graduate out of the three. And in another example, I knew a girl that graduated from Kalani HS, and she ended up getting a scholarship to Harvard.
So a big factor is the student, and how they apply themselves to their studies. Like I always believed, "gas is like knowledge, the more gas you have in your tank, the further you can go in life".
Thanks for adding "student" to an important factor in education. And I had several classmates that went on to elite colleges, even though McKinley isn't considered one of the top schools.
I went to Kaimuki hi in the 60’s. The English and math standards that I graduated with were low academically but I was labeled college bound. Somehow, I managed to get a masters degree in Education in a reputable college on the mainland. Many in my classroom did well. Now? Kaimuki may be different.
GE could also help schools in areas where there is a lack of younger children, ie. Hawaii Kai and Manoa, attract students from areas where there has been an explosive increase of younger children, ie. Ewa. That way, those school without a large base of students would be able to stay open while taking the pressure off of schools where there has been a sudden increase in the younger population.
GEs help with spreading out student populations and schools that would struggle to keep enrollment up. It's just interesting that the areas that you mentioned struggle to have kids in proximity to those schools. Are the kids that are growing up in those areas going to private school? Does that have that much of an impact?
GE are sometimes just a necessity. When my wife and I worked in town and we lived in Ewa Beach. There was no way we could have our kid go to an Ewa Beach school and be able to pick her up on time. I never had a GE when I was a kid, but it really helped me with my kid. And our education system here needs a lot of improvements. Go Tigers!
Definitely helps with logistics. It's the reason I went to Town schools.
CHRIS Thank You every Child should be offered by the Department of Education a Fair Deal ! SCHOOL should be Free for all Children! I SAY in we’ll Hawaii it should have Agriculture and Tech available for Any Children!
This is a catch 22. It is more likely that smart school administrators listened to their parents and started to provide the requested services causing other parents to consolidate at those schools. Offer the services and the students will come. Forcing the other direction will only mean you have fights for specific housing that is already at a premium to be in district for a desired school.
I'd hope that each of the schools provides unique things that make it stand out. I noticed a lot of the "better" school provide Japanese language programs. If it's something that families want, maybe other schools can start providing that as well.
Chris, is there bussing in Hawai'i like there is stateside?
There are bus services, but many of the bus routes have been cut due to driver shortages.
@@HelloFromHawaii No, my question did not refer to the availability of public transit, sorry.
It referred to this: : The transporting of children to a school outside their residential area as a means of achieving racial balance in that school.
@@SuiGenerisAbbieI used to take public transportation busses to school. I remember, my brother was trip trained by my mom to go 3 different busses to his school. He was 6 years old.
The school busses are usually for special needs students, OR - private schools have busses to pick up/drop off kids all over the island
Chris I love your Work it Education is for Parents who have Demographic INSTABILITY BUT the DEPARTMENT OF Education should allow all the options of OPERATION! BASED on not Income!
What is your opinion on trumps Education plan? Correct me if I am wrong but he is advocating for ‘School Choice’ which I believe gets rid of GE? And what is your opinion on Trump wanting to get rid of the DOE? Thanks
I agree. Education is currently run by each state. That's why there are School Boards. The federal government just doles out tax money to the states. If parents had a choice there would be competition to be the best which makes or breaks a school.
I haven't reviewed Trump's education plan so I can't comment on specifics. However, if all parents had a choice on where to send kids to school in Hawaii, it would be interesting to see where kids end up and how the schools react. I'd think that some schools would get overwhelmed and others would shrink and lose critical funding.
The Republicans push for school vouchers. Meaning the state would give you a voucher u could take to a prive school. Help u pay for the tuition. However like Arizona learned alot of poor people couldnt use the vouchers because it wouldnt cover all the expenses of a private school, also if it wasnt close they couldnt get their child to the school. So it just pulled money away from public schools and handed it to the rich who were going \to send their kids to private anyway.
Complicated. Sounds like money has an effect. Not cash, but money to live in specific neighborhoods and such.
Many variables to think about:
Children's background: GT, Special Needs, Sports, Curriculum
School Demographics:
Title I schools are schools that receive federal funding to support students from low-income families.
Versus non Title I: More fund raising maybe involved
Teacher's background- Highly Qualified background
School background- Blue Ribbon
Private school may have Teacher's background different
Private school tuition may be expensive
Been there, done that. Feel bad that my kids high test scores were given to their GE school rather than their district school. I didn’t have any issues with our school district but first, their C- grade from Hawaii Pacific Business magazine made us check if we had other options. Second, we just lived too far for my daughter to walk to school and we didn’t know about the school bus but even if we knew about the school bus it was still scary to let my little kid wait at the remote dark bus stop in the morning or have her catch bus home by herself and wait until 6pm for the parents to get home.
I think we got GE because first the kids had an aunty nearby the GE school should there be an emergency. Second, my work was near the school so I could get them when they needed to leave during school and after school. Third, probably most important is that I said I could help the school because of my work location and I put my money where my mouth was and volunteered a lot with school activities and fundraising.
In hindsight a bunch of Hawaii public schools do offer a lot to students but I think it takes effort on the students to be aggressive in finding the educational opportunities and it takes will power for students to push themselves to achieve when 1/2 of the students are not disciplined to prepare themselves for college. Also,I think puberty in general plays major mind games on teenagers and I don’t know the solution on solving the teenager phase of rebellion and confusion.
Before anyone complains about Hawaii public schools, my son’s classmate attended Waipahu High School and he got accepted into Harvard. WHS offered all the hard college classes and all the AP classes so they did offer all that is needed to get into any American university. It’s up to the students to take advantage of what is offered.
Thanks for sharing what happened with your kids. I think it's great that you volunteered with school activities. And yes, kids get into colleges from public and private schools.
You are in my area, so you are probably kaahumanu, which definitely get an exception. Wilson is pretty good, I'm fortunately to send mines to a private school, but would consider wilson if they couldn't get in.
I have my daughter in Waikiki elementary school. This is her second year there. TBH I think Wai’alae charter is better, more sense of community and staff are more approachable, plus their academics and curriculum are nicer and their events are way better. I wish I can change her but she has made lot of friends and is closer to home. I have friends with their kids in Noelani and they said the school is great but traffic can be terrible when getting into Manoa. But if there’s a way I can get her to UH Lab I’ll definitely transfer her.
Btw, with Trump in power next 🤮 and treating to end the DOE, how you think Hawai’i public schools will be affected?
I've heard great things about Waikiki. I also heard about the Noelani traffic.
I'm not sure how Hawaii schools will be affected by the new administration. Maybe funding issues?
My kiddo was at Waikiki too, and I was not impressed with the school at all. There were 4 different teacher in kindergarten and the 1st grade teacher was notorious for yelling and being super strict. There was a lack of communication and we never felt supported with specific education needs. I'm looking to get my kid to private school if possible
You could always use relatives addresses. No GE needed.
😆 Shhh. That's the sneaky secret a lot of locals use. lol
Fortunately, GE is available. It's unfortunate that there are schools that's a big no for those able to see through the weeds. I was in public school throughout and did ok. And yes, it's what you put in that you get out of it. Parent support and involvement are critical, but sad to say there seems to be more...my child is right, and you teacher are wrong.
"GE" in Hawaii is only if you know the right people
I agree that parent support is critical. Not just in the child's education, but also with communication with admin and teachers.
THANK YOU MAHOLO kids need Center of Interest of Information! SCIENCE, Math and THE also ENVIRONMENTAL ! ARGUING the Fact Agriculture Schools needs 2 in Hawaii!
I like your theory of hey what happen if all our kids go to the base home school if we can balance it out? Send your kids den😂 no really i hope your kids get into good schools. Just watching this is beinging me stressful memories.
It's an interesting question and I'd like to see what would happen to the schools if there was more of a balance.
It’s not the school. My kids went to Waianae schools they had no problem it all depends on the student and parenting
No need private school. They all end up at the same colleges. I know more successful public school graduates than private school ones. Go figure.
We left Hawaii so that our children could get a better education. For the most part, you need to go private in Hawaii. Hard to say you live in Paradise when life is so hard.
School is what the student, parents and faculty make of it. Leaving Hawaii solely for a child's education is a pretty expensive route to justify just for one child. I remember when I was a teen working part time at the supermarket, still in high school and I knew guys going to private school from work. It was a private school, they did not seem like they were at the academically top of the list at the school, one guy even mentioned that they were working to see who the worst in their class could be. I find it hard to justify relocating just for one or more kids' education. If it gave the parents an higher wage, better benefits, opportunities to rise and do career wise, as well as buying a home. All of those things are long term benefits for the family, whereas, if the child gets a good education but ends up doing what they choose in a career, any student in a public school could do or worse, then it seems, it was a move that wasn't beneficial to the family. I had a neighbor couple work in town, commute to Kailua, had 3 beautiful, smart, talented daughters who could easily, have gone to private school or one in town, but all three daughters, were top students, the first two might have been valedictorians, but at least National Merit students with high GPA. The third daughter while not top, but near to the top. All three had colleges on the mainland, two attended MIT. The parents were proud of all three daughters. Opportunity, individuality and perseverance is something that attending the best doesn't mean much, if they don't maximize the opportunity.
Same. You have to toughen your kids up for public schools. And the only way we got a geographic exception from Central to Washington was because we knew somebody. But even Washington Middle School was horrendous. We moved out of state ! Just for her education alone and to save her future
I am military. Daughter graduated from Kapolei HS back in 2020. 3 classmates got into Harvard. My boys went to Leilehua HS. Barely any real difference except much newer, nicer facilities at Kapolei. Students still got accepted to Harvard and Princeton. My neighbors kids go to Mililani HS... What stands out is that they literally seek out the best students in terms of sports, academics, and extra curriculars just so they can sell that they are a better school to everyone. Only athletes seemingly have a leg up based on my experience. Academics and college acceptance is all about individual student effort.
During COVID, 20k a year tuition private schools put kids on Khan Academy. Meanwhile, Hawaii DOE created online virtual lessons for public school students. Private schools do not teach kids tolerance and acceptance - it teaches them that you can pay more for status. Learning is 100% between individual teachers, parents, and students.
Moving away from Hawaii for education is silly. Every one told me when I was assigned here that my kids would be dumber and the schools sucked. Then my daughter was in a robotics class where they were doing a project that a MIT Student did a Masters level project on and failed to create it himself. My special needs son started to thrive. And I experienced little difference between public schools in D.C. and here except my kids were happier and felt safer in them.
If it makes you feel better to pay more to increase your child's marketability or you want them to be boarded without directly parenting them - pay for private. But in terms of education differences, I would never encourage someone to pay more for barely any difference in quality of education and less exposure to the actual community that they will ultimately live and work in later.
I don't think that students need private school. I'm sure that many families would prefer that route, but there are a lot of successful people who went to public school and there are many benefits that often get overlooked in public education in Hawaii.
Can you bribe the school officials with gifts???
lol. I don't think so 😆