Hana High did it again.
For the second year in a row, three rural Maui seniors have earned the prestigious scholarship. Diana Naihe, Leihulu Oliveira and Jora Tolentino-Smith will have a free ride all the way through their doctorate should they pursue advanced degrees.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a huge thing,鈥 Hana principal Rick Paul said Friday. 鈥淲e鈥檙e an island on an island. These scholarships can have a huge impact on a small, isolated community.鈥
Funded by the and administered by the , the 14-year-old program picks 1,000 minority students annually to receive a “good-through-graduation scholarship” to use at any college or university of their choice. The months-long application process includes an educator’s review of the student’s academic record and an evaluation of the student’s community service and leadership activities.
Tolentino-Smith called the scholarship “life-changing.” She said she didn’t think she or her family, who mostly live off the land, could ever afford college.
“We don鈥檛 really need a lot of money so don鈥檛 really worry about that stuff,” she said. “Now I can do whatever I want to do.”
Tolentino-Smith, who found out Thursday that she won, said she wants to study Hawaiian language and Hawaiian studies at either the University of Hawaii-Hilo or Montana State University. Graduation is May 18, but she has until July to decide which college.
Her goal is to be a Hawaiian language teacher and eventually start a Hawaiian language school on Maui.
“We have every other aspect of our culture here except for language,” she said.
The students have to write eight essays and fulfill a host of other requirements as part of the scholarship’s application. Teachers and community members support the kids through this process, and Paul singled out Hana counselor Linda Gravatt as being particularly instrumental.
鈥淲e seem to be able to get Gates Scholars every year now and we鈥檙e just so glad,鈥 he said. 鈥淎ll of these kids, the one thing we鈥檝e seen, is they have really compelling stories.鈥
Tolentino-Smith鈥檚 grandmother, Ma’ano Tolentino-Smith, was a longtime preschool teacher until her retirement last year. She struggled to find the words to express her enthusiasm for her granddaughter, but recalled the story of how she found out this week.
鈥淢y daughter looked at me and said, 鈥楳om, Jora got the Gates,鈥欌 she told Civil Beat. 鈥淎ll I could say is, 鈥楶raise God.鈥 I didn鈥檛 know how to react to that. Then I thought about it, and was like, 鈥榃owww. She鈥檚 blessed.鈥欌
Tad Bartimus, an award-winning journalist, has worked with Hana students since 1998 as a writing coach and college mentor, helping them study for scholarships and apply to college.
鈥淟ast year, when the class of 2012 produced three Gates Millennium Scholars, the whole East Maui ohana took pride in the accomplishment because we truly believe that it takes a village to raise a child,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e thought then that the odds of lightning striking three times to give Hana three Gates scholars in one year, in a graduating class of 20, were incalculable. And now, lightning has struck again to a class of 20, and we can rejoice in three more Gates girls.鈥
The Hana community is roughly 80 percent Native Hawaiian or part-Native Hawaiian, Paul said. And 75 percent of the 350 students enrolled in the pre-kindergarten to 12th grade school are on free or reduced-price lunch.
Paul said he thinks the Gates Millennium Scholars program has its eyes on Hana because it realizes what the scholarships can do for the kids.
鈥淭hese kids have a wonderful opportunity and they have dreams,鈥 he said.
Bartimus said this May the first Gates Millennium Scholar she ever worked with as a Hana high school senior in 2007, Lipoa Kahaleuahi, will receive her master’s degree in education. She graduated from the University of California at Santa Barbara in 2011, and is now a Teach for America teacher on the Big Island.
Bartimus also worked with Lipoa’s brother, Tevi Kahaleuahi, Hana class of 2009, now a junior at Oregon State University majoring in forestry; their sister Hau’oli Kahaleuahi, a 2012 Gates Scholar, also attending Oregon State University; Miracle Helekahi, Gates scholar class of 2011, a sophomore at Johnson and Wales University in Denver; and 2012 Gates Scholars Nina Mei Thorne, a freshman at the University of Washington-Seattle, and Cheyenne Kamalei Pico, a University of Colorado-Boulder freshman.
鈥淓very one of our Gates Millennium Scholars has been worthy of this major national recognition of their character, heritage, hard work, incredible family support and the united community effort on their behalf,鈥 Bartimus said. 鈥淚 am joyous beyond words for them and their families.鈥
Paul said going to college wasn鈥檛 in the picture for Hana kids in the past, but in recent years it鈥檚 become part of the conversation. He said it鈥檚 people like Gravatt and community volunteers who changed the expectation.
“It’s too cool,” Board of Education Chair Don Horner said Friday after learning of the scholarship awards. “We鈥檙e incredibly excited, given the prestige of the scholarship, and also incredibly appreciative of the Gates Foundation and the generosity.
“I鈥檇 expect continued great results from our kids; we have incredible kids in Hawaii,” he added. “All we need to do as adults is set the standards and our kids can indeed reach them.”
GET IN-DEPTH REPORTING ON HAWAII鈥橲 BIGGEST ISSUES
Support Independent, Unbiased News
Civil Beat is a nonprofit, reader-supported newsroom based in 贬补飞补颈驶颈. When you give, your donation is combined with gifts from thousands of your fellow readers, and together you help power the strongest team of investigative journalists in the state.
About the Author
-
Nathan Eagle is a deputy editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at neagle@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at , Facebook and Instagram .