honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Thursday, July 19, 2007

'Voyagers' in 'Ewa blazing their own trail

By Gordon Y.K. Pang
Advertiser West O'ahu Writer

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Dana Amarau prepares Holomua's Junior Police Officers for crossing guard duty in front of the school. Holomua, which opened in 'Ewa Beach in 1996, was the state's first year-round, multi-track school.

Photos by JEFF WIDENER | The Honolulu Advertiser

spacer spacer

MYADVERTISER.COM

Visit myAdvertiser.com to find news and information about your neighborhood.

spacer spacer

AT A GLANCE

Where: 91-1561 Keaunui Drive, 'Ewa Beach

Phone: 685-2000

Web address: www.holomua.k12.hi.us

Principal: (how long at school) 11 years

School nickname: Voyagers

School colors: Blue and gold

Test results: Stanford Achievement Test. Listed is the combined percentage of Holomua students scoring average and above average, compared with the national combined average of 77 percent: third-grade reading, 92 percent; math, 91 percent; fourth-grade reading, 77 percent; math, 87 percent; fifth-grade reading, 81 percent; math, 84 percent; sixth-grade reading, 84 percent; math, 89 percent. Hawai'i State Assessment. Listed is the combined percentage of Holomua students meeting or exceeding state standards. Third-grade reading, 57 percent (state average: 50.2 percent); math, 40 percent (state average: 30 percent); fourth-grade reading, 65 percent, (58.1 percent); math, 32 percent, (32.5 percent); fifth-grade reading, 40 percent, (43.5 percent); math, 18 percent, (24 percent); sixth-grade reading, 47 percent (47.5 percent); math, 36 percent (27.6 percent).

Enrollment: 1,554 (as of 2006-07), capacity of 1,000. It's the largest elementary school in Hawai'i.

History: Opened August 1996, first multi-track elementary school 2000

Special features: Designed as multi-track school, energy efficient, wired for technology

Computers: 650

spacer spacer
Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Math coach Christine Dash helps Darion Rotolo in the "Achieve Now" learning lab at Holomua Elementary. The school's multi-track setup means "less summer learning loss," says Principal Norman Pang.

spacer spacer

The teachers, faculty and staff of Holomua Elementary School are living up to their school nickname as "voyagers" by charting a different course at the 11-year-old 'Ewa school.

First, it became the state's first year-round, multi-track school when it opened in 1996. Then, several years ago, it became the state's largest K-6 elementary school with an enrollment of 1,554 students, about 1,100 of whom are on campus at any given time.

"Essentially, we're four schools," said Principal Norman Pang, winner of this year's $25,000 Masayuki Tokioka Excellence in School Leadership Award, which honors a public school principal who is "visionary, community-minded and has an entrepreneurial spirit."

Pang is a proponent of year-around schools. "In the multi-track setting, the students have less summer learning loss because of the short break," he said. "So our teachers really only spend a few days reviewing whereas other schools might have to spend one or two weeks to review before they move on."

Despite its size and the challenges that come with it, Holomua has consistently done well on standardized tests, Pang said. What makes him even happier is that they're continuing to improve.

Student test scores from grades 2 to 6 increased by about 20 percent over the past year, said Rodney Luke, one of the school's vice principals.

One reason may be Holomua's three-year-old partnership with PLATO, a company that manufactures software designed to reinforce skills in reading, language arts and math based on individual student needs.

One component of the PLATO partnership is the Math Achieve Now program led by Holomua math coach Christine "Ulu" Dash. Analyzing the results of standardized assessment tests, "we determine who those just-approaching students are so we can work with them in a smaller environment with a multitude of resources," Dash said.

Additionally, software provided by PLATO allows faculty and staff to determine the specific skills that individual students need to work on to improve their performance, Dash said.

Another faculty member does the same with students in need of extra help in language arts, and there is a learning center for those who qualify for special services.

"Technology has really helped our teachers," Pang said. "But the bottom line is still the teacher.

"From the very first year, the faculty and staff that came in were true learners and were willing to adjust their teaching styles based on research. They were flexible and not afraid to change," thus embracing the concept of being voyagers, he said.

  • What are you most proud of? How everyone in the school works together to improve student education.

  • Best-kept secret? Performing arts program.

  • Everybody at our school knows: Mel Matsuda (head custodian).

  • Our biggest challenge: Having more than 1,500 students and managing them in a multi-track setting.

  • What we need: More land and facilities to accommodate classrooms.

  • Projects: Science Resource Center.

  • Special events: Curriculum Nights, Parent Visitation Week, Ohana Fair, Spring Program.

    Reach Gordon Y.K. Pang at gpang@honoluluadvertiser.com.