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Farrington High School, Kalihi; Kaimuki High School, Kaimukī; Kaiser High School, Hawaiʻi Kai; Kalani High School, East Honolulu; McKinley High School, Central Honolulu; Moanalua High School, Moanalua/Salt Lake
The Kaimuki-McKinley-Roosevelt Complex Area is one of nine Hawaii Department of Education complex areas on the island of Oahu, Hawaii, USA.It is part of the Honolulu District and operates two community schools, three high schools, five middle schools, nineteen elementary schools, five public charter schools, and two special schools.
Kings Park High School is a four-year secondary school located in Kings Park, New York, United States.It is the only high school for Kings Park Central School District, which serves the community of Kings Park, and students who attended Park View Elementary, Fort Salonga Elementary, Ralph J. Osgood Intermediate School, and William T. Rogers Middle School.
Construction of the Hawaiʻi Campus cost roughly $225 million. Like its sister campus in Pukalani on Maui, the Hawaii Campus graduated its first class in 2006. Ninia M. E. Aldrich became principal of the high school in 2002. About 100 students were in the first high school class in 2002. [3]
McKinley is one of three schools in the Kaimuki-McKinley-Roosevelt Complex Area which includes Kaimuki High School and Roosevelt High School. It was founded as Fort Street English Day School in 1865. Later known as Honolulu High School, it was renamed in memorial to William McKinley, the twenty-fifth President of the United States, in 1907.
Hanalani Schools is a private Christian school founded in 1952 and located in Mililani, [1] on the island of Oahu, that offers classes for students in preschool through high school. Hanalani is fully accredited by the American Association of Christian Schools and the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, and has approximately 720 ...
The Kapālama high school administered 344 Advanced Placement exams in 2014. [64] Upper-class students at the Maui and Hawaiʻi high schools select a "Career Academy" based on their individual interests. They develop course schedules designed to enhance skills for potential careers within their academy's scope.
Enrollment in the 1998-1999 school year was 1,311 students. In 2013, King Kekaulike High School was named one of eleven "Best High Schools in Hawaii" by U.S. News & World Report [3] and one of ten Hawaii schools in The Washington Post's annual index of "America's Most Challenging High Schools."