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St. Andrew's Schools is a private K–12 school in Honolulu, Hawaii.Made up of The Priory, an all-girls K–12 program with a college preparatory school; The Prep, the all-boys K–5 program; and a co-educational preschool for ages 2–5 years in the Nu'uanu valley.
Ua Mau ke Ea o ka ʻĀina i ka Pono (Hawaiian pronunciation: [ˈuə ˈmɐw ke ˈɛə o kə ˈʔaːi.nə i kə ˈpo.no]) is a Hawaiian phrase, spoken by Kamehameha III, and adopted in 1959 as the state motto. [1] It is most commonly translated as "the life of the land is perpetuated in righteousness."
Queen Emma's candidacy was agreeable to many Native Hawaiians, not only because her husband was a member of the Kamehameha Dynasty, but she was also closer in descent to Hawaii's first King, Kamehameha the Great, than her opponent. On foreign policy, she (like her husband) was pro-British while Kalākaua, although being pro-Hawaiian and ...
Construction of the Hawaiʻi Campus cost roughly $225 million. Like its sister campus in Pukalani on Maui, the Hawaii Campus graduated its first class in 2006. Ninia M. E. Aldrich became principal of the high school in 2002. About 100 students were in the first high school class in 2002. [3]
In 2003 the Hawaii Senate voted $2,500,000 to plan, design, and construct a library for the school. [3] The Hawaii Federal Fire Department chose this school to launch the 2004 Fire Prevention Week on October 5, 2004. [4] Kindergarten teacher Ruth Komatsu was named in January 1997 as one of Hawaii's Top Teachers. [5] Notable alumni:
Though many Americans think of a vacation in a tropical paradise when imagining Hawaii, how the 50th state came to be a part of the U.S. is actually a much darker story, generations in the making.
About 12,100 students were enrolled in Hawaii public charter schools in the 2022-23 school year. Noh, 53, has been a state Department of Education superintendent for the Castle-Kahuku complex ...
By 1955, all three schools had moved to the current 600-acre (2.4 km 2) campus in Kapālama Heights. The schools became co-ed in 1965. [9] In 1996, the school opened a 180-acre (0.73 km 2) campus on Maui, followed in 2001 by the 300-acre (1.2 km 2) campus on Hawaiʻi.