Iolani School
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- Iolani redirects here. For the palace see ʻIolani Palace.
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Name |
ʻIolani School |
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Address |
563 Kamoku Street |
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Town |
Honolulu, Hawaiʻi 96826 |
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Established |
1863 |
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Community |
Urban |
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Type |
Independent |
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Religion |
Episcopal Church |
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Students |
Coeducational |
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Grades |
K to 12 |
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Accreditation |
Western Association of Schools and Colleges |
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Nickname |
Raiders |
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Mascot |
ʻIo (Hawaiian Hawk) |
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Colors |
Black, Red and White |
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Motto |
One Team, "humble in victory, gracious in defeat" |
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Newspaper |
Imua ʻIolani |
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Yearbook |
Ka Moʻolelo O ʻIolani |
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Headmaster |
Val Iwashita |
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Distinctions |
Fourth largest independent school in the United States[1] |
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Website | ||
ʻIolani School, located at 563 Kamoku Street in Honolulu, Hawaiʻi, is a private coeducational college preparatory school serving over 1,800 students.[2] Founded in 1863 by Father William R. Scott, it was the principal school of the former Anglican Church of Hawaiʻi. It was patronized by Kamehameha IV and Queen Emma who gave the school its name in 1870. ʻIolani in the Hawaiian language means heavenly hawk. Today, ʻIolani School is affiliated with the Episcopal Church in the United States. It is administered by a Board of Governors and is one of the largest independent schools in the United States.
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] Early years
On December 16, 1861, Lord Bishop Thomas Nettleship Staley arrived in Hawaiʻi upon a joint request of Kamehameha IV and Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom. The following year Kamehameha IV, a devout member of the Church of England, established the Hawaiian Reformed Catholic Church, also known as the Anglican Church of Hawaiʻi.
In 1863, Lord Bishop Staley's companion Father Scott purchased land in Lāhaina and established Luaʻehu School, a school for boys. When Father Scott fell ill and returned to Britain, Father George Mason was summoned by Lord Bishop Staley to administer the school. When Lord Bishop Staley, too, left the islands for Britain in 1870, Father Mason moved the school to the Cathedral Church of Saint Andrew in downtown Honolulu. It was there that the widowed Queen Emma gave the school its current name.
With the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi and annexation to the United States in 1898, the Anglican Church of Hawaiʻi was dissolved and taken over by the Episcopal Church United States (ECUSA). ʻIolani School was moved to Nuʻuanu, transferred back to downtown Honolulu and then moved to Nuʻuanu a second time. It remained in Nuʻuanu from 1927 to 1953, when it was moved to the present Ala Wai site.
In 1980, the school officially became co-educational, ending its all-male enrollment policy.
[edit] Development
ʻIolani School quickly grew with time. ʻIolani School further refined its program offerings with a standard college preparatory curriculum as a foundation for every student. Religion, performing and visual arts, music and athletics became integral parts of the modern ʻIolani School education.
[edit] Campus
The campus itself is divided into two main parts: Upper and Lower School. The campus buildings include Castle Building, Weinberg Building, the I-Wing, the art building, and the Nangaku Building. Other facilities include the Upper Gym and the Lower Gym, the Ranzman Library, the Dillingham Pool, and St. Alban's Chapel. Iolani School also has a stadium (Kozuki Stadium), a baseball field, an outdoor basketball court (the One Team Field house), and several tennis courts. [3]
Recently, the campus went under minor renovations for the removal of Convention Drive.
[edit] Athletics
ʻIolani School's athletic program was founded in 1932 by Father Kenneth A. Bray. Over 900 or 70% of the student body belongs to an ʻIolani School athletic team in over 32 competitive sports. ʻIolani School is a member of the Interscholastic League of Honolulu, an athletic conference composed of Honolulu-area private schools.
Since the formation of the Hawaiʻi High School Athletic Association, ʻIolani has won over 75 state championships in various sports. In recent history, it is the only school in Hawaiʻi to have won five consecutive state championships in Boys Basketball from 2002 to 2006. ʻIolani also possesses the most consecutive state championships in Boys Wrestling, with distinction as the first ILH school to win a Girls Wrestling State Championship in 2005.
[edit] State championships
2006 | 2005 | 2004 | 2003 | 2002 | 2001 | 2000 |
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Boys Basketball | Varsity Football-Division II | Boys Basketball | Boys Volleyball | Cross Country - Girls | Girl's Volleyball | Softball - Division 1 |
Boys Basketball | Canoe Paddling - Boys | Cross Country - Boys & Girls | Boys Basketball | Cross Country - Girls | Boys Soccer | |
Boys Cross Country | Swimming & Diving - Boys, Girls | Boys Basketball | Swimming & Diving - Boys | Tennis - Girls | Wrestling - Boys | |
Girls Wrestling | Canoe Paddling - Boys | Tennis - Girls | Tennis - Girls | |||
Swimming & Diving - Boys | Track & Field - Girls | Tennis - Girls | ||||
Wrestling - Boys | ||||||
Track & Field - Girls |
1999 | 1998 | 1997 | 1996 | 1995 | 1994 | 1993 | 1991 | 1992 | 1990 |
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Softball - Division II | Cross Country - Girls | Boys Soccer | Swimming & Diving - Boys & Girls | Girls Bastketball - Division I | Boys Basketball | Wrestling - Boys | Girls Soccer | Wrestling - Boys | Wrestling - Boys |
Girls Soccer | Boys Basketball | Baseball | Wrestling - Boys | Wrestling - Boys | Wrestling - Boys | Boys Golf | |||
Tennis - Girls | Girls Basketball - Division I | ||||||||
Baseball |
1989 | 1988 | 1987 | 1986 | 1984 | 1983 | 1982 | 1981 |
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Wrestling - Boys | Boys Soccer | Soccer - Boys & Girls | Wrestling - Boys | Wrestling - Boys | Boys Basketball | Boys Golf | Track & Field - Boys |
Girls Basketball - Division I | Wrestling - Boys | Girls Basketball - Division I | Baseball | Baseball | Boys Golf |
1979 | 1977 | 1975 | 1974 | 1971 |
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Boys Soccer | Baseball | Boys Soccer | Tennis - Boys | Tennis - Boys |
Baseball | Baseball |
1968 | 1967 | 1966 | 1965 |
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Tennis - Boys | Tennis - Boys | Tennis - Boys | Tennis - Boys |
[edit] Education
ʻIolani is divided into two different sections: Lower School and Upper School.
Lower School is for kindergarten through 6th grade. It is separate from Upper School and the teaching environment represents one of an elementary school.[4]
Upper School is for 7th through 12th grade. The schedule is divided into eight different periods, which rotate weekly. Each student normally has one study hall/free period and one elective, although new students who do not take a language normally have a second study hall or elective.[5] ʻIolani students can also take courses during summer school, which allows them to have a free period during the regular school year.
According to a school profile[6], ʻIolani School has had 849 Advanced Placement (AP) examinations, with 85% of the seniors participating. Out of these 849 examinations, 56% earned a score of 5, 85% earned a score of 4 or 5, and 97% earned a score of 3, 4, or 5.[2]
In 2008, ʻIolani School had 32 National Merit Semifinalists out of a total of 73 from Hawaiʻi.[2]
SAT scores (for the class of 2007)
- Verbal: 560 - 690 (middle 50%).[2]
- Math: 600 - 730 (middle 50%).[2]
- Writing: 570 - 680 (middle 50%). [2]
[edit] Keables Guide to English
ʻIolani School uses a form of grammar correction known as the Keables Guide to English. The Keables guide was first introduced by ʻIolani teacher Harold Keables in 1965. In papers written by ʻIolani students, teachers typically mark grammatical mistakes using the Keables codes. An example of a code would be C3, used where a student makes a mistake by not marking commas within a series of objects. [7] In eighth and seventh grade, students are not required to memorize the entire guide; however, in ninth grade, they are expected to.
[edit] Robotics
ʻIolani School also has several robotics teams which participate in the various competitions organized by FIRST. Iolani has a FIRST Robotics team, a FIRST Lego League team, and a Junior FIRST Lego League team. Besides FIRST related teams, ʻIolani also has a Botball team and a Vex team.
ʻIolani's FIRST Lego League team won the Hawaiʻi State Championships in 2007. [8] They competed at the World Festival in 2008 as the representative for Hawaiʻi; they did not win any awards.
[edit] Notable Alumni
- Angela Aki, singer-songwriter of the Final Fantasy XII theme song, "Kiss Me Good-Bye".
- Bern Brostek, professional American football player.
- Shenan Brown,[9] rapper known as Shen in the Japanese group Def Tech.
- Jeff Chang, author of "Can't Stop Won't Stop, A History of the Hip-Hop Generation".
- Mike Fetters, MLB pitcher.
- Mufi Hannemann, politician and mayor of the City and County of Honolulu.
- Duke Hashimoto,[10] forward for Real Salt Lake of Major League Soccer.
- Charles Kalani, Jr., known as Professor Toru Tanaka
- Kanoe Kamana'o, WAC All-Star Volleyball Player [11]
- Guy Kawasaki, one of the original Apple employees responsible for marketing of the Macintosh in 1984, as well as a CEO and author. [12]
- Clyde Kusatsu, actor. [13].
- Brad Lawson, member of USA Youth National Volleyball team.
- Christopher Lee,[14] former president of production for TriStar Pictures, executive producer of "Superman Returns".
- Derrick Low,[15] point guard, Washington State University. Led the Cougars in scoring during the 2006-2007 season. Three-time Mr. Basketball in Hawaii as a Raider. [16]
- Kalaʻi Miller, actor. [17]
- Grace Nikae, concert pianist. [18]
- Kawika Shoji, son of the UH Women's volleyball coach. Member of USA Junior National Volleyball team.
- Hongzhe Sun,[19] A NCAA DI swimmer at Stanford, as well as an Olympic Trials Qualifier. [20]
- Sun Yat-sen, Chinese revolutionary and the first president of the Republic of China, as well as co-founder of the Kuomintang.[21]
[edit] Notes
- ^ Did You Know?. Iolani School. Retrieved on 2008-05-23.
- ^ a b c d e f Iolani Class of 2007 profile (PDF). Retrieved on 2008-03-28.
- ^ Campus Map.. Retrieved on 2007-12-17.
- ^ Iolani Lower School. Retrieved on 2008-01-17.
- ^ Iolani Upper School. Retrieved on 2008-01-17.
- ^ See the School profile
- ^ Keables Guide to English. Retrieved on 2007-10-26.
- ^ 2007 Hawai`i FIRST LEGO League Tournament Awards (HTML). Retrieved on 2008-02-01.
- ^ Musician Shenan Brown '99. Iolani School website (15 September 2006).
- ^ ProXtreme Soccer Camp: Feat. Duke Hashimoto ‘02. Iolani Alumni (15 December 2006).
- ^ Kanoe Kamana`o. University of Hawaii. Retrieved on 2008-01-18.
- ^ Guy Kawasaki. About Guy. Retrieved on 2008-01-18.
- ^ Clyde Kusatsu at the Internet Movie Database
- ^ Alumni Making Headlines (January 2005). Christopher Lee '75. Iolani School website.
- ^ Derrick Low '04 in Pan American Games. Iolani School website.
- ^ Mr. Basketball: Iolani's Derrick Low reaches a new height as the Star-Bulletin's Player of the Year. Retrieved on 2008-01-18.
- ^ Kala'i Miller at the Internet Movie Database
- ^ Ars Centrum. Professional Biography. Retrieved on 2008-01-20.
- ^ Alumni Making Headlines (April 2005). Sun ’03 Shines in Pool and Classroom. Iolani School website.
- ^ 2008 Olympic Trials Qualifiers list (PDF). Retrieved on 2008-01-18.
- ^ Jonathan D. Spence. Sun Yat-sen. TIME magazine. Retrieved on 2008-01-18.
[edit] References
- Hawaiʻi High School Athletic Association
- (1997) At Thy Call We Gather: Iolani School. Honolulu, Hawaii: Iolani School, 296.