The idea sprang from a lunchtime meal over hamburger steak and saimin at a Zippy’s restaurant in 2014.

Why, wondered Alapaki Nahale-a and Andrew Aoki — community members who are deeply involved in social and civic causes — do only kids who excel academically or on achievement tests get recognized within the education system?

The U.S. Presidential Scholars Program came to mind. That’s the prestigious, highly selective federal program that recognizes students who score exceptionally well on the SAT or ACT, have high GPAs and demonstrate stellar performance in extracurriculars.

“Not every kid can be that kid,” Aoki, co-founder of Islander Institute, a civic enterprise focused on spreading values of Hawaii’s unique culture, told Civil Beat.

Thus was born the idea for Islander Scholars, which brings together a select group of high school juniors from public and charter schools statewide for a three-day immersive experience in the foothills of west Oahu to practice and share the values of culture, community and sense of place.

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Open to all public high school juniors, the students are nominated by their high school principal or counselor. Though some are academic standouts with aspirations to go to college and beyond, the only “merit-based” criteria here is leadership, resilience in the face of personal challenges or serving as a role model.

“The idea came as a way to do a Hawaii version of Presidential Scholars,” Aoki said. “It was to have something that feels a little more familiar, to help us question our ideals. To ask, ‘What does it mean to be a real, educated kid?’”

Now in its third year, Islander Scholars aligns with a framework the Hawaii Department of Education has been phasing into schools since it was adopted by the Board of Education in 2015. It’s called Na Hopena A’o, or HA for short.

Rooted in the values of Hawaii’s indigenous culture and language, HA reflects a shift from the testing and achievement-driven focus of Common Core and No Child Left Behind to outcomes that emphasize the learning environment, collective engagement and multiculturalism through place- and project-based learning.

The DOE is approaching year three of a pilot program to weave HA into Hawaii’s network of 292 schools where a large portion of the teacher population is still weathering top-down, achievement-focused outcomes. It may require a shift in mindset, but proponents believe the paradigm will ultimately benefit kids in Hawaii.

“Right now we have a system that has a very narrow definition of success,” said Jessica Worchel, the DOE’s HA special projects manager. “What we’re saying is, there’s many ways to be successful: taking care of family, being involved with the community, being a kalo farmer.”

“If we had different definitions of success, maybe we’d have more students who are achieving, if it’s more than just a test score.”

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On paper, Hawaii is signaling its intention to do just that. Hawaii’s Blueprint for Public Education — attached to its state plan under the Every Student Succeeds Act, which replaced No Child Left Behind — expresses a desire to move away from a focus on standardized tests and toward more authentic assessments.

Many schools already take part in project-based learning, whether that’s through river restoration cleanups or cultivating school farms, according to Worchel. Newer initiatives like the DOE’s Farm to School meals program and a “Grow Our Own” initiative to groom homegrown teachers also reflect HA.

The framework is also showing up in subtle ways in the school environment, she said.

At Waipahu High, for instance, Principal Keith Hayashi no longer asks students, ‘What do you want to be when you grow up?’ but ‘What problem do you want to solve?’

“It’s a leap of faith to say, ‘I’m gonna step outside this treadmill for a while and I’m going to focus on building relationships,’” Worchel said.

A Weekend Celebration

The latest class of Islander Scholars gathered last weekend at Camp Palehua in Kapolei to celebrate their connection to Hawaii and contributions to their community.

They were selected for a number of reasons: serving as a student body vice president or as a mentor to elementary school kids, for staying after school to help out a teacher, showing a commitment to learning hula, or, in the case of one young teen, having “a warm personality and deep respect … for her peers and adults.”

They were 38 students — 17- and 18-year-olds from different cultures, socioeconomic backgrounds and family origins — from throughout the state. They hiked the nearby Waianae-Nanakuli mountain range, worked on plant restoration, visited the fishing village Mokauea Island and shared stories in small groups about the challenges of high school life, of being a teen.

Recognition came in the form of short tributes during a Sunday capstone luncheon attended by prior Islander Scholars from the 2016 and 2017 academies. The current participants were presented with necklaces and showered with grass lei. In a large white tent under a brilliant blue sky, they were served a buffet lunch of traditional Hawaiian dishes of kalua pig, lomi salmon, poi, chicken long rice and haupia.

The all-expenses-paid program is run by Islander Institute and Malama Learning Center. Funding comes from Kamehameha Schools, Alaska Airlines, Harold K.L. Castle Foundation, Hawaii Government Employees Association, Honuʻapo, Hawaii State Teachers Association, HEI Charitable Foundation and Na Lei Aloha Foundation.

Programming partners include HMSA Foundation, The Kohala Center and Kokua Kalihi Valley.

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Students arrived Friday on the sloping campsite, after the last calendar day of the school year, not knowing each other. Many left Sunday having forged what may prove to be long-lasting friendships.

“(At first), I was intimidated actually,” said Zerasha-Rashan Carden, of Kua O Ka La Public Charter School on the Big Island. “I’m a very shy person.”

Her biggest takeaway from the academy: “I learned that I shouldn’t judge people when I see them.”

Others spoke about experiencing a sort of self-awakening when it comes to fitting into a place when they’re not originally from Hawaii.

“You don’t have to look like an islander to act like an islander,” said Madailein Miller, of Castle High in Kaneohe. “It means acceptance in a place you wouldn’t automatically think I would make a home.”

She moved to Hawaii from Michigan with family two years ago.

Miller admitted to feeling like “an outsider” when she arrived on the island. As for her puncturing that mentality: “I think it’s all the person you are,” she said.

Seated beside her, D’Artagnan Kunishige, of Honoka’a High and Intermediate School on the Big Island, nodded. Born and raised in Hawaii, the teen, who is of mixed Hawaiian, Chinese, Japanese and Portuguese descent, chimed in with his take.

“In reality, they’re friendly over here,” he said.

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Some may say HA helps promote a more inclusive school climate and that Islander Scholars recognizes students who practice a culture of acceptance. One of the state Board of Education’s priorities for the upcoming school year is shaping policy to foster safe learning environments and reduce bullying.

(Nearly one in five high-schoolers in Hawaii reported having been bullied on school property in 2015, according to a recent Youth Risk Behavior Survey, while nearly one in two kids reported the same in middle school.)

As brief as the Islander Scholars Academy is, past scholars said they have remained in touch through channels like Instagram and Snapchat group chats.

“This is not a program where kids come and we teach them stuff,” said Nahale-a, the senior director of regional strategies for Kamehameha Schools on Big Island. “This is where we introduce them to each other and we get out of the way.”

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