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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Thursday, October 4, 2007

Community spirit is strong at Wai'anae

By Will Hoover
Advertiser Wai'anae Coast Reporter

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Raechelle Fabrao, Wai'anae Intermediate's acting principal, says there is a "family-like" bond between the school's teachers and students.

JEFF WIDENER | The Honolulu Advertiser

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AT A GLANCE

Where: 85-626 Farrington Highway, Wai'anae, HI 96792

Phone: 697-7121

Web address: http://waianaeint.k12.hi.us

Principal: Raechelle Fabrao is principal until John Vannatta returns from sabbatical in January 2008. Fabrao has been a vice principal for eight years. Vannatta has been principal for five years.

School nickname: Menehune

School colors: Aqua and white

Enrollment: 1,010

History: Opened in 1966 with 400 seventh-graders

Testing:

  • 2006 Stanford Achievement Test. Listed is the combined percentage of students scoring average and above average, compared with the national combined average of 77 percent. Seventh-grade reading, 56 percent; math, 65 percent. Eighth-grade reading, 58 percent; math, 59 percent.

  • 2006 Hawai'i State Assessment test. Listed is the combined percentage of students meeting or exceeding state standards. Seventh-grade reading, 27 percent (47.3 percent); math, 12 percent (29.1 percent). Eighth-grade reading, 21 percent (38.6 percent); math, 9 percent (25.1 percent).

    Special programs: Cross-Age Tutoring (two seventh-grade teams tutor Kamaile and Wai'anae Elementary students); National Junior Honor Society; Math Team; Menehune productions; STAR and Accelerated Reading Program; Million Word Reading Campaign; Ramp up to Literacy; Connected Mathematics Program; Ai Pohaku Hawaiian Studies program; after school tutoring, summer school tutoring; Summer School, Band and Chorus; Positive Behavior support; Intramurals and Inter-School Sports.

    Computers: Three computer labs of 30 computers each, and a set of 29 computers in the library.

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    Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

    Wai'anae Intermediate School teacher Sarah Carter addresses her class inside the school's library.

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    "Once upon a time, long, long ago," reads an inscription beneath a framed black-and-white photograph gracing the wall in the principal's office at Wai'anae Intermediate School.

    The 1966 picture depicts a sleepy, two-structure country school sitting peacefully alone in the shadows of the Wai'anae mountains, which tower in the background. That idyllic, fairy tale setting would alter over time as the school's initial enrollment of 400 students nearly tripled, the facility evolved into a sprawling campus and the staff faced the special challenges affecting the economically disadvantaged region.

    One former student recalls that 15 years after it started, Wai'anae Intermediate barely resembled the photo on the wall. Yet, it maintained its sense of community.

    "I went through the seventh and eighth grades at this school from 1979 to 1981," said Raechelle Fabrao, who today is the school's acting principal. "It was great. There were connections. There are a couple of teachers here who were teaching when I went to school."

    Today, Fabrao said, a "family-like" bond remains between students and teachers in spite of, or perhaps because of, the challenges the school continues to face — high-risk students, low achievers, increasing numbers of homeless children, absenteeism and a high teacher turnover rate.

    The school meets these challenges head-on, never losing sight of its stated commitment to strive for excellence.

  • What are you most proud of? The school's Teaming and Advisory program that supports student learning as well as individual student needs.

    "So if a student has any problems they will filter through those counselor and vice principals," Fabrao said. "If there is anything going wrong, students can see their home room teachers, or advisers, and the counselors and vice-principal attached to those particular Houses are notified."

  • Best-kept secret: Our students have a lot of heart.

    "Our kids are real," said Fabrao, who believes there's a misconception by people outside the community that Wai'anae youth are generally troublemakers. On the contrary, there's an outright honesty about them that sets coast students apart, she said.

  • Everybody at our school knows: Mrs. Bernie Taaca, vice principal and former PE teacher.

    "She went to school here, too," Fabrao said. "She's been a teacher here for over 20-something years. She's easy to get along with. She has a lot of feeling for the kids, but she can be outspoken. You can't pull the wool over her eyes. She knows every trick in the book."

  • Our biggest challenge: To improve the negative public perceptions of the Wai'anae community. Another big challenge is meeting the Adequate Yearly Progress requirements as set by the state Department of Education.

  • What we need: School renovation, which has been put off for five years.

    Reach Will Hoover at whoover@honoluluadvertiser.com.