Sherwood Hara, the first elected member of the state Board of Education representing Kaua’i and Ni’ihau, wants back on the board so he can take care of some unfinished business. While serving on the BOE from 1980 to 1988, the
Sherwood Hara, the first elected member of the state Board of Education
representing Kaua’i and Ni’ihau, wants back on the board so he can take care of
some unfinished business.
While serving on the BOE from 1980 to 1988, the
Hanapepe resident was co-author of the policy lowering class sizes to 20
students per teacher.
That is currently in effect for grades kindergarten
to two. The second phase – grades three to six – never was
accomplished.
“This continues to be a priority for me, for I believe small
class ratio enhances your child’s learning,” said Hara, who left the board in
1988.
He said he has four other priorities he would address if he is
elected again to the board:
l Every child in every public school in the
state should have a textbook for each of his classes. Textbooks are “the basic
tools behind learning,” he said.
l The policy for dealing with violence in
the schools should be revisited, as activities impacting the classroom have
become more violent, he contends.
l More attention, he says, needs to be
paid to vocational and technical education, especially with technological
advances made in the past few years.
l And teachers need to be provided
with the tools, including books, computers and training, and be freed from
extra tasks which take away from quality education time, he says.
“We
should strive to make the classroom and the teacher the best for the child, for
the best education the (state Department of Education) can provide,” stressed
Hara.
For example, he said, Maili Elementary School on O’ahu got funding
from the Legislature to install air conditioners in classrooms. Two years
later, the classrooms are still stifling hot, as Governor Ben Cayetano hasn’t
released the funds for the cooling system.
Hara said if he were the board
member from Kaua’i, he would have contacted Cayetano to encourage him to
release those funds.
Where school and teacher accountability are concerned,
Hara feels sanctions for under-performing schools seem punitive, especially
since teachers are the front-line providers of education.
Hara said he
would rather see a system that provides interim support for those
under-achieving schools, to bring them up to standards.
“Children are the
consumers of public education,” and the board, state and district
superintendents and everyone else involved in delivering public education need
to be accountable to students, parents and teachers, he said.
Everyone also
needs to understand that, outside of the immediate family, the teacher is the
most important person in a student’s life, Hara said.
“We need to realize
how important the teacher is,” he asserted.
Hara endorses the modified
school calendar, or the year-round schooling schedule some Kaua’i schools have
already adopted.
The long summer, where children aren’t stimulated like
they are in the classroom, is bad for learning, he said.
It’s a logistical
nightmare for everyone from district superintendent Daniel Hamada on down to
students and parents to have some Kaua’i schools on the modified calendar and
some not, Hara said.
“We’ve got to think of the child,” said Hara, 63. He
added some parents are against the modified calendar because of their work and
vacation schedules.
Hara said he is not against local school boards or
county involvement in the state’s public-school system. If county government is
to get involved, the questions are “How?” and “When?” he said.
If
construction of classrooms or maintaining schools’ physical environment is the
way county governments want to go, that’s probably OK for large, rich counties
like the city and county of Honolulu. But smaller, cash-strapped counties, like
Kaua’i, will have a hard time providing funds for schools, he
said.
Partnerships between state and county governments need to be
developed carefully, he noted.
Local school boards could fulfill a need for
providing information and networking capabilities the elected Board of
Education member could turn to, Hara said.
Hara said he would investigate
the reestablishment of district school advisory councils and library advisory
commissions. The two volunteer boards were done away with during budget cuts.
Hara recalls getting computers into the public libraries 20 years ago, to
allow those without home computers to access the World Wide Web and Internet
and do other types of research.
The computers in the public libraries also
provide a vital link to cultural events, as there are limits to what a small
island like Kaua’i can provide in terms of concerts, plays, and other cultural
opportunities, he said.
He would work for more books and computers for the
island’s public libraries, he said.
Hara, who holds college degrees in
social work and educational counseling, retired after 40 years with Kaua’i
Family Court, most of those as director.
He’s active in his church and
other volunteer organizations, and he reads to young people in the public
libraries and schools.
Staff writer Paul C. Curtis can be reached at
245-3681 (ext. 224) and [pcurtis@pulitzer.net]