No state embraces private K-12 education more than Hawaii, often at聽great personal sacrifice for parents, children and the community. Intertwined in this pervasive private school narrative is the idea that some kids are more equal than others, generating both an elitist class on Oahu and a counterculture response.
While former President Barack Obama graduated from聽Punahou School, he also acknowledged to the institution and its culture, including drug use and racist undertones. Hawaii鈥檚 private schools have their other media darlings, too, such as Heisman Trophy winner Marcus Mariota, now a for St. Louis School, and Kamehameha Schools student , the voice behind
But Cravalho鈥檚 鈥淢oana鈥 co-star, Dwayne Johnson, the , ; Grammy Award-winner is a graduate, and Grammy Award-winner and Oscar-nominated actress Bette Midler went to both and the University of Hawaii. All of those are public institutions.
Speaking of UH, do you know to college than anywhere else?
These particular tensions underlying the public-private school divide in Hawaii also spill over into its media stories, leading to subtexts that create secondary narratives for those attuned to them.
Under A Media Microscope
One of the most cryptic examples recently was Rob Perez鈥檚 Honolulu Star-Advertiser piece on , a former Iolani School student with a questionable resume.
While this story was packaged as a general temperature-taking of tensions about college applications around this time of year, its initial premise obfuscated what seems to be its true intent, which was to question Amano鈥檚 highly publicized origin story.
As a teen at Iolani, Amano had become a community hero through her redemption tale. She claimed to have witnessed her grandmother being forced into a homeless shelter. She said her own personal reliance on a local food bank led her to form a nonprofit organization and gather edibles for others at a prodigious pace. Her story spread locally and nationally, including a profile in 2015.
In that profile, Amano claimed that during high school she only 鈥渨ent to class one or two times a month鈥 because she was so focused on her nonprofit. The journalist failed to ask the obvious follow-up question: So how did you get accepted then to Duke University, one of the in the country?
The 鈥減rivate school鈥 label can be wielded as a positive or a negative.
Perez鈥檚 story points out many other contradictions or holes in her account that deserve further consideration and investigation. (Amano did not respond to my attempt to reach her .)
Some of those include by 16, she had raised more than $600,000, collected 98,000 pounds of food and recruited more than 400 youth volunteers in 26 states. When eventually questioned about those details by Iolani during her junior year, according to , Amano forfeited her $20,000 scholarship and dropped out of the private school and then bounced between two public schools, Kalani and Kaimuki, as a senior.
Perez could not reach Amano to ask her directly about discrepancies in her statements and also could not find documentation to back Amano鈥檚 philanthropic claims, such as the standard paperwork filed in the state when a person starts and maintains a nonprofit organization. At best, he found much smaller community impacts, such as $5,500 in cash contributed to the state鈥檚 food bank by Amano in 2014-2015 (but no additional donations of packaged food).
He also found that much of the material in Amano鈥檚 story wasn鈥檛 confirmed or questioned by the awarding organizations, and it simply didn鈥檛 add up. Just one example: She claimed in her Jefferson Awards Foundation bio that, starting at age 14, she聽worked multiple jobs for more than 50 hours a week.
As Perez noted, that would mean Amano worked illegally (because child labor laws don鈥檛 allow 14-year-olds to work), and she would have been working more than seven hours a day, seven days a week, in addition to attending school and running her nonprofit.
‘Punahou Privilege’
Amano isn鈥檛 the only local kid to pad a resume or fabricate/embellish a heart-wrenching tale about the troubles of youth. Remember Manti Teo鈥檚 narrative? But when that kid associates with one of Hawaii鈥檚 costly private schools, such as Iolani, or Punahou (as Teo did), some in the community might feel a certain sting to institutional pride and/or a prejudice against the elitist support system that could have coddled and allowed such behaviors.
The 鈥淧unahou privilege鈥 perception on Oahu also seems at the core of the outrage in the recent court case about an albatross slaughter on Kaena Point. The details of the case, chronicled by Civil Beat columnist Denby Fawcett, are vile enough on their own:
After learning of the place during a school field trip, Christian Gutierrez, Carter Mesker and Raymond Justice allegedly went to the North Shore bird sanctuary with a machete, baseball bat and air rifle to smash eggs, destroy nests and cut off the legs of the gentle and legally protected birds, so they could claim the identification tags of the animals as trophies.
If that isn鈥檛 sick enough, these young men apparently went to a party afterward and bragged about what they did, showing off the tags and social-media images. Some of their classmates turned them in. Yet this case has lingered in the court system (conspiracy theories abound) for more than a year, and the men at this point seem likely to have plea-bargained their ways out of jail time and marks on their permanent records.
How would this case have been handled, reader Dan Gardner wondered in a comment on one of Fawcett鈥檚 column, if the 鈥減erpetrators had attended Waianae or another public high school?鈥
A 鈥渃oncerned senior,鈥 though, noted in another comment that 鈥渕any associated with Punahou School are saddened and shamed鈥 over the connection of this crime to the school. This reader argued that the 鈥渄evelopment of ethics and morals are primarily the (responsibility) and role of parents (and) families. We cannot blame a school for what these individuals did.鈥
In these ways, 鈥減rivate school鈥 and 鈥減ublic school鈥 labels in Hawaii fail us all of the time. Support systems vary widely, per person. Individuals make decisions, some good and some bad. People do things.
One can鈥檛 label聽the alleged criminals in this albatross slaughter case as 鈥淧unahou kids鈥 without also crediting the other 鈥淧unahou kids鈥 who turned them in to authorities. In such ways, the 鈥減rivate school鈥 label can be wielded as a positive or a negative. Punahou is a school, but it also is a local status symbol, interpreted in different ways by different audiences. What you make of that symbol also is what you will make of the related story.
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About the Author
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Brett Oppegaard has a doctorate degree in technical communication and rhetoric. He studies journalism and media forms as an associate professor at the University of Hawaii Manoa, in the School of Communications. He also has worked for many years in the journalism industry. Comment below or email Brett at brett.oppegaard@gmail.com.
Reader Rep is a media criticism and commentary column that is independent from Civil Beat鈥檚 editorial staff and does not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of Civil Beat.