Editor’s Note: Civil Beat asked聽Mufi Hannemann, the Hawaii Independent Party candidate for governor, numerous times throughout September for an interview for this story but he was never available.聽
Hawaii is the only state that isn鈥檛 broken up by multiple school districts. That means Hawaii 鈥 whose population of roughly 1.4 million people makes it the 11th smallest state 鈥斅 actually encompasses one of the largest school districts in the country.
The , to be exact, costing taxpayers for operations alone. Together, the Department of Education and charter schools are the state鈥檚 single biggest expense.聽
The state鈥檚 school district serves more than 185,000 students (and their parents) and roughly 25,000 employees, a little over half of whom are teachers. From Niihau to Keaau, that district comprises a hodgepodge of cultures and income groups, school contexts and learning needs.聽
And according to both Duke Aiona and David Ige 鈥 the Republican and Democrat vying to be Hawaii鈥檚 next governor 鈥 therein lies one of the greatest challenges facing public education in the state.
In fact, the two candidates have a lot in common when it comes to assessing Hawaii鈥檚 public schools. One of the only education issues on which they appear to disagree strongly is the proposed constitutional amendment that would allow the state to amend Hawaii鈥檚 constitution听补苍诲聽permit聽the allocation of public funds for private preschools. Aiona supports it, while Ige opposes it.聽
Both Aiona and Ige think that Hawaii鈥檚 students aren鈥檛 achieving their full potential in the classroom and that the state imposes unfair expectations on teachers.
Ige is endorsed by the Hawaii State Teachers Association, and his wife is a vice principal at Kanoelani Elementary School in Waipio. Aiona sometimes works as a substitute teacher at Kapolei and Holomua elementary schools.聽
Aiona and Ige regularly use the phrase 鈥渟chool empowerment鈥 when talking about how they鈥檇 overhaul Hawaii鈥檚 DOE, a term they defined as enabling principals and teachers 鈥 rather than and the appointed, nine-member 鈥 to decide what happens in the classroom. Neither of them are very happy with the BOE, saying they support the idea of an appointed board but question the quality of current members鈥 expertise.聽
Their focus could be a response to 鈥 or at least a reflection of 鈥 the public disapproval that seems to have dominated conversations about the DOE lately. One of the most obvious examples of that disapproval is the newly formed Education Institute of Hawaii, which promotes 鈥渟chool empowerment鈥 and is being spearheaded by a board of directors that includes seven retired principals and Randy Roth, who as former Gov. Linda Lingle鈥檚 education advisor t. 聽
Both Aiona and Ige said they鈥檙e skeptical of the Common Core standards, new universal math and language arts learning benchmarks that went live in Hawaii schools this fall. The standards are being used as a factor to determine teachers鈥 evaluation scores and, ultimately, their pay.聽
And they both lament what they describe as the failure of 鈥 the decade-old law that aimed to 鈥渞einvent鈥 the DOE, namely by how schools are funded 鈥 to fully achieve most of its objectives. The far-reaching reform legislation strived to give principals more control over their budgets and created the 鈥渨eighted student formula,鈥 which bases a school鈥檚 allocations on student need rather than strictly on enrollment.聽
Aiona: All About Options
When it comes to education, Aiona believes in options. He believes the state should do a better job of ensuring parents can enroll their kids in any kind of educational program they choose, from Hawaiian immersion charter schools to Catholic college preparatory institutions.聽
Aiona says education in Hawaii should resemble the 鈥渇ree market.鈥澛 Aiona, who was raised Catholic, attended , as did two of his four children. The other two attended Kamehameha Schools.聽
The state鈥檚 public schools, Aiona said, should aim to prepare students for competition in the 21st-century economy, whether that means continuing their education in college or going straight into careers and jobs. One of his first initiatives would be an 鈥渆arly college鈥 program that would be almost entirely funded by local businesses, foundations and federal grants and allow high school students to graduate with both an associate degree and diploma.
Aiona, who has Native Hawaiian ancestry, criticized the state鈥檚 treatment of Hawaiian immersion public schools, particularly its failure to deliver standardized assessments in the language.聽
He also wants greater support for parents who , which represent about 3 percent of the state鈥檚 public-school population.聽
鈥淭here are a lot of families where home-schooling is not just a convenience 鈥 it鈥檚 not about keeping their children in a bubble 鈥 it鈥檚 really about giving them an opportunity to excel,鈥 he said.聽
Specifically, Aiona, a said he would push for legislation making home-school children eligible to participate in extracurricular activities at their neighborhood public school. Sen. Sam Slom, the state鈥檚 only Republican Senator, to little avail. 聽
Given Aiona鈥檚 view of education as a free-market enterprise, it鈥檚 no surprise that Aiona supports the ballot measure that that would allow the government to subsidize families that want to send their children to private preschools. He鈥檚 the only top gubernatorial candidate to say he鈥檚 voting yes on the ballot initiative.聽
Interestingly, a recent Civil Beat poll found that those identifying as moderates and conservatives generally said they are voting no on the question, while those identifying as liberals said they are voting yes. (Overall, the poll of 1,055 registered voters suggested that people are torn about the issue, with 45 percent saying they oppose the idea and 40 percent saying they support it.)
The biggest problem with the DOE, Aiona said, is school governance. He spoke of the unsuccessful efforts of Lingle, under whom Aiona served as lieutenant governor, to break up the public school system 鈥 but he didn鈥檛 go as far as saying he would decentralize the state into separate school districts.聽
Aiona said created by Act 51, which factors in both schools鈥 enrollment and needs and was passed during Lingle鈥檚 tenure, hasn鈥檛 achieved its mission of streamlining the DOE and making school finance more equitable.
He cited the Common Core standards as one example of a centralized DOE-gone-wrong. The 鈥渃ookie-cutter鈥 standards and related requirements are taking a toll on educators鈥 morale, which exacerbates already-high teacher turnover rates, he said, adding that he questions the Common Core but wouldn鈥檛 necessarily eliminate them.聽
鈥淲hen you don鈥檛 see value to something and you鈥檙e forced to do it, the morale is lowered a little 鈥 you lose that spirit,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd as such some of them just go through the motions, and they鈥檙e not teaching because of the passion they had when they wanted to embark on this profession.鈥
Policies such as those involving standards and curriculum have to be developed at a much more local level, he said.聽
Aiona acknowledges that restructuring the DOE is a hefty task that involves聽 years of policymaking and a significant change in attitude.聽
To kick things off, Aiona would call for an independent management audit of the DOE to identify specific areas that the department should run more efficiently.聽
Ige: ‘Leadership at the School Level’
Ige, a graduate of Pearl City High School, also believes in decentralization.
鈥淚鈥檝e always believed that school reform will be driven by leadership at the school level,鈥 he told Civil Beat back in June.聽
Ige was more pointed than Aiona in his criticism of the BOE, arguing that it hasn鈥檛 done its part to engage with the public. He wonders why the board doesn鈥檛 hold hearings on the neighbor islands anymore, noting, 鈥淚t鈥檚 clear the board hasn鈥檛 been open to community input.鈥
鈥淧eople with broader connection and commitment to public education would鈥檝e been important,鈥 he said, referring to the board Gov. Neil Abercrombie appointed.
In particular, Ige questioned why the board brushed off the 鈥渧ery, very serious concerns鈥 raised in a recent independent survey conducted among 160 of the state鈥檚 255 DOE principals, including the widespread fear of retaliation for speaking out.聽
The board renewed Superintendent Kathryn Matayoshi鈥檚 contract just days after a group of critics, citing the survey, formally called for a leadership overhaul at the department. Those critics include some of the people on the board of the new Education Institute of Hawaii.聽
鈥淚f you believe, and I do, that principals and teachers at the school level (are) a key component for school transformation, then what does it say if your key leaders say the system isn鈥檛 working?鈥 Ige said.
Ige was noncommittal when asked about breaking the state up into separate school districts but said he would entertain the idea of shifting more funding responsibility to the counties.
Ige says the state should hold off on using the Common Core standards as benchmarks to which schools are held accountable. He agrees with the Gates Foundation鈥檚 call for a moratorium on the use of the Common Core in 鈥渉igh-stakes decisions鈥 such as teacher evaluations, a recommendation that hasn鈥檛 resulted in a change locally.聽
The former Senate Ways and Means Committee chairman said one of his main concerns about the current evaluation system is that it requires 15 times the resources than in the past but hasn鈥檛 been accompanied by the same amount of school-level support. He called the system 鈥渙ff-based.鈥
Still, Ige doesn鈥檛 regret his highly scrutinized decision to kill a series of key education-related proposals this year. The state, he reasoned, simply couldn鈥檛 afford to fulfill those promises, something he realized after the Council on Revenues鈥 downgraded forecast. The bills would鈥檝e cost an additional $90 million, he said.聽
That legislation included that would have required the DOE to survey schools鈥 classroom needs and develop a 鈥渕aster cooling strategy.鈥澛
鈥淲e can only do what we can afford, and on a lot of fronts we just couldn鈥檛 afford it,鈥 Ige said, adding that his committee allocated more funding to the weighted student formula than the DOE and had requested. The Legislature 聽for school-based budgeting rather than the $14 million included in the .
A legislative聽聽which was working on聽the bill when the funding level was adjusted, reads: “These funds go directly to schools to provide resources for students. 聽Your Committee reiterates its intent that all funds appropriated for the WSF be expended at the discretion of principals and that the use of the funds shall not be directed by the central office, district, or complex.”
One specific reform Ige would implement is an opportunity for teachers to work year-round and be compensated for that time. Principals and state administrators, he pointed out, are some of the only DOE employees who have that option. Such work would include opportunities to design curriculum and mentor, he said.聽
Ige鈥檚 three children graduated from private schools 鈥 two from Punahou and one from Iolani 鈥 after attending Pearl Ridge Elementary in their earlier years.聽
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