La Escuela Secundaria President William McKinley , más comúnmente conocida como Escuela Secundaria McKinley , es una escuela secundaria pública integral en el Distrito de Honolulu del Departamento de Educación del Estado de Hawái . Sirve de noveno a duodécimo grado. McKinley es una de las tres escuelas en el área del complejo Kaimuki-McKinley-Roosevelt que incluye la preparatoria Kaimuki y la preparatoria Roosevelt . Fue fundada como Fort Street English Day School en 1865. Más tarde conocida como Honolulu High School , pasó a llamarse en memoria de William McKinley , el vigésimo quintoPresidente de los Estados Unidos , en 1907. La Escuela Secundaria President William McKinley es una de las escuelas secundarias más antiguas del estado y varios de sus edificios han sido incluidos en el Registro Nacional de Lugares Históricos . El campus exhibe esculturas de Satoru Abe (1926–) y Bumpei Akaji (1921–2002). La escuela secundaria McKinley está acreditada por la Asociación Occidental de Escuelas y Universidades .
Escuela secundaria presidente William McKinley | |
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Habla a | |
1039 South King Street , Hawái , 96814 | |
Información | |
Tipo | Escuela secundaria pública |
Lema | Ike Makaukau Aloha |
Establecido | 1865 |
Distrito escolar | Distrito de Honolulu |
Principal | Ron Okamura |
Facultad | 93,50 FTE [1] |
Los grados | 9 - 12 |
Numero de estudiantes | 1.583 (2017-18) [1] |
Proporción de estudiantes por maestro | 16,93 [1] |
Instalaciones | Urbano |
Colores) | Negro y oro |
Atletismo | Asociación Interescolar de Oahu |
Nombre del equipo | Tigres |
Rival | Escuela secundaria Farrington Escuela secundaria Kaimuki Escuela secundaria Roosevelt |
Acreditación | Asociación Occidental de Escuelas y Universidades |
Periódico | El piñón |
Anuario | Negro y oro |
Militar | Ejército de los Estados Unidos JROTC |
Distinciones | Registro Nacional de Lugares Históricos |
Sitio web | www |
Escuela secundaria McKinley | |
Localización | 1039 S. King St., Honolulu, Hawái |
Coordenadas | 21 ° 18′17 ″ N 157 ° 51′1 ″ O / 21.30472 ° N 157.85028 ° WCoordenadas : 21 ° 18′17 ″ N 157 ° 51′1 ″ O / 21.30472 ° N 157.85028 ° W |
Área | 8 acres (3,2 ha) |
Construido | 1924 |
Arquitecto | Louis E. Davis Vladimir Ossipoff |
Estilo arquitectónico | Misión / Renacimiento español |
NRHP referencia No. | 80001281 [2] |
Agregado a NRHP | 11 de agosto de 1980 |
Historia
La escuela secundaria se estableció en 1865 como la escuela diurna de inglés de Fort Street . Fue fundada por Maurice B. Beckwith. En noviembre de 1869, se trasladó al Palacio de la Princesa Ruth. En 1895 pasó a llamarse Honolulu High School . En 1907 se trasladó a la esquina de las calles Beretania y Victoria y pasó a llamarse President William McKinley High School . [3]
El 5 de junio de 1938, la escuela entregó diplomas a 1.288 estudiantes, la mayor cantidad de diplomas en la historia de la escuela. [4]
Demografía de los estudiantes
Año escolar 2010-2011
- Matrícula - 1782
- Número de estudiantes económicamente desfavorecidos - 1026 (57,5%)
Composición racial:
- Nativos americanos - 9 (0.5%)
- Negro - 12 (0,7%)
- Chino - 449 (25,6%)
- Filipino - 347 (19,8%)
- Nativo de Hawái - 173 (9,9%)
- Japonés - 163 (9,3%)
- Coreano - 110 (6,3%)
- Portugués - 10 (0,6%)
- Samoano - 72 (4,1%)
- Indochino - 151 (8,6%)
- Micronesia - 98 (5,6%)
- Tonga - 13 (0,7%)
- Guameño / Chamorro - 8 (0.5%)
- Blanco - 78 (4.5%)
- Otros asiáticos - 10 (0,6%)
- Otras islas del Pacífico - 8 (0,5%)
- Isleño del Pacífico (2 o más) - 1 (0,1%)
- Múltiple (2 o más) - 4 (0,2%)
Facultad
Año escolar 2001-2002
- Número total de profesores: 108
- Número de profesores con 5 o más años en esta escuela - 85 (78,7%)
- Años promedio de experiencia - 18.1
- Número de profesores con títulos avanzados - 32 (29,6%)
Año escolar 2010-2011
- Número total de profesores: 98
- Número de profesores con 5 o más años en esta escuela - 69 (70%)
- Años promedio de experiencia - 17.2
- Número de profesores con títulos avanzados: 42 (43%)
Información de área compleja
La escuela secundaria McKinley es parte del área del complejo Kaimuki-McKinley-Roosevelt del Departamento de Educación de Hawái junto con la escuela secundaria Kaimuki y la escuela secundaria Roosevelt .
Complejo McKinley
El Complejo McKinley consta de 11 escuelas chárter primarias, intermedias y públicas, incluida McKinley.
- Escuela secundaria central
- Escuela pública autónoma Halau Lokahi
- Escuela Primaria Kaahumanu
- Escuela Primaria Kaiulani
- Escuela Primaria Kauluwela
- Escuela Primaria Lanakila
- Escuela primaria Likelike
- Escuela Primaria Lunalilo
- Academia Myron B. Thompson (escuela pública autónoma)
- Escuela Primaria Real
- Escuela pública autónoma Voyager
Escuelas intermedias alimentadoras
McKinley High School se alimenta principalmente de 4 escuelas intermedias en el área de Honolulu.
- Escuela secundaria central
- Escuela secundaria Prince David Kawananakoa
- Escuela secundaria Robert Louis Stevenson
- Escuela Intermedia President George Washington
Actividades extracurriculares
Atletismo
En 2011, McKinley presentó 56 equipos que compiten en 19 deportes. Estos deportes incluyen air rifle , béisbol , baloncesto , bolos , remo en canoa , porristas , campo a través , fútbol , golf , judo , fútbol , softbol , tenis suave , natación , tenis , atletismo , voleibol , waterpolo y lucha libre . McKinley compite en la Asociación Interescolar de Oahu .
McKinley ha alineado equipos femeninos en baloncesto, voleibol y natación desde la década de 1910. Algunos años incluso jugaron en el equipo femenino de béisbol antes de que el softbol fuera reconocido como su propio deporte. Los anuarios de esos primeros años señalaron juegos a menudo contra St. Andrew's Priory, YWCA, Palama, Normal School (más tarde se fusionó con la Facultad de Educación de la Universidad de Hawai) e incluso la Facultad de Hawai (ahora conocida como Universidad de Hawai ). McKinley fue miembro fundador de la Liga Interescolar de Honolulu en 1909 junto a Punahou y Kamehameha . En 1970, McKinley dejó ILH con otras 4 escuelas públicas del área de Honolulu para unirse a la OIA .
The 1933 football team traveled across the Pacific Ocean and went on to defeat Weber College (now known as Weber State University), BYU freshmen team, and Ricks College (now known as BYU-Idaho).[5] Ricks College traveled to Honolulu the following year. McKinley won again by the score of 24-6 in a game attended by about 19,000 fans.[6]
Football
The McKinley Tigers varsity football team competes in the Oahu Interscholastic Association Red-East division. Joseph Cho has served as the team's head coach since 2010.
For the 2010 and 2011 seasons, McKinley's Tiger football team competed in the Oahu Interscholastic Association White Division (Division II) along with 7 other Oahu public schools including rival Kaimuki High School. In 2012, the football team was promoted to the OIA Red-East Division (Division I) where it currently competes with 6 other Oahu public schools. The Tigers' homefield is currently the 3000 seat Ticky Vasconcellos Stadium on the Roosevelt High School campus.
In September 2012, the McKinley football team traveled to Corvallis, Oregon to play the OSAA 4A champions La Salle High School Falcons on the campus of Crescent Valley High School. McKinley won 43-22.
Season records
Season | Head Coach | Record | Division | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2010 | Joseph Cho | 4-4-0 / 4-5-0 | OIA White | Did not qualify for OIA White play-offs. |
2011 | Joseph Cho | 5-3-0 / 6-4-0 | OIA White | Finished ranked 4th in Division after losing in semi-final play-off versus Pearl City. |
2012 | Joseph Cho | 3-3-0 / 4-5-0 | OIA Red-East | Finished ranked 4th in Division after losing in wild card play-off versus Campbell. |
2013 | Joseph Cho | 3-3-0 / 5-5-0 | OIA Red-East | Finished ranked 3rd in Division after losing in quarter final play-off versus Campbell. |
McKinley Athletic Complex
In September 2008, it was announced that McKinley was planning to upgrade its aging athletic facilities. Expected to cost more than $121 million, the upgrade has 14 elements including a 1,200 stall parking lot, construction of a second gym, renovation of the current gym, construction of a girls softball stadium, construction of a baseball stadium, construction of a 50-meter swimming pool, and construction of a 10,000 seat football stadium.[7][8][9]
In 2011, ground was broken on the softball stadium. When completed, the softball stadium will be designated as the OIA softball championship field.
Championships
OIA TITLES | |
Sport | Championship Years |
Baseball | 1976, 1978 |
Basketball (girls) | 1988, 1995, 1996, 1997, 2007, 2008 |
Bowling (boys) | 1994 |
Bowling (girls) | 1976, 1977, 1981, 1982, 1983 |
Cross Country (boys) | 1988, 1989, 2001 |
Cross Country (girls) | 1989 |
Judo (boys) | 1983, 1989, 1993, |
Soft Tennis (boys) | 2012, 2013 |
Soft Tennis (girls) | 2013 |
Soccer (boys) | 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977 |
Track & Field (boys) | 1989 |
Volleyball (boys) | 1976, 2012 |
Volleyball (girls) | 1991, 1994, 1996 |
Wrestling (boys) | 1972, 1996, 1997, 1999 |
Wrestling (girls) | 1998, 1999 |
STATE TITLES | |
Sport | Championship Years |
Basketball (boys) | 2007 |
Basketball (girls) | 2011 |
Bowling (boys) | 1974, 1994 |
Bowling (girls) | 1982, 1983, 1984 |
Judo (girls) | 2007 |
Soccer (boys) | 1978 |
Wrestling (girls) | 1998 |
Alumnos destacados
Listed alphabetically by last name (year of graduation or years of birth and death)
- Satoru Abe (1926-) – sculptor
- Joseph Kaiponohea ʻAeʻa (1882-1914), hānai son of Queen Liliʻuokalani
- Abraham Akaka Minister
- George R. Ariyoshi (1944) - Governor of Hawaiʻi (1974–1986); first American of Japanese descent elected governor in the United States
- Gladys Kamakakuokalani Brandt
- Larry Buenafe (1988) U.S. Marine Corps, Sergeant Major, first Filipino American to served as the Sergeant Major for Marine Light Attack Helicopter Squadron 369, served in six combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan.
- Tammy Duckworth (1985) - U.S. Army Major, and Iraq War veteran. Democratic member of the U.S. House of Representatives from the eighth district of Illinois. United States Senator from the State of Illinois
- Hiram L. Fong (1924) - U.S. senator (1959–1977)
- Harry "Fuji" Fujiwara (1949) Former pro wrestler, most popularly known as Mr. Fuji for World Wrestling Entertainment.
- Leina'ala Kalama Heine (1958) – kumu hula[10]
- Yuna Ito (2001) - J-pop singer; In 2007 released debut album, HEART, which debuted at #1 on the Oricon charts in Japan
- Daniel Inouye (1924-2012) - member of U.S. Army's 442nd Regimental Combat Team (known as the "Go For Broke" regiment) which in World War II rescued a Texas Battalion surrounded by German forces in a battle known as the rescue of "The Lost Battalion"; Medal of Honor recipient; U.S. representative (1959–1962); U.S. senator (1962–2012). President pro tempore of the United States Senate, 4th highest-ranking member of the U.S government.
- Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson (1986–1987, freshman and sophomore year only) - Professional, actor
- Duke P. Kahanamoku - Olympic gold medalist in swimming (1912 and 1920)
- Benny Kalama - Musician, falsetto singer
- Keichi Kimura - artist[11]
- Wah Kau Kong (ca. 1937) - first Chinese-American fighter pilot in World War II
- Ford Konno (1952) - won four medals in swimming at the 1952 and 1956 Olympic Games, including 2 gold medals and 2 silver medals, and set an Olympic record in the 1500m free
- Arthur Lyman (1932–2002), jazz vibraphonist
- Masaji Marumoto (1906-1995), Hawaii Supreme Court judge
- Fujio Matsuda (1942), educator
- Edith Kawelohea McKinzie (1925–2014), author, genealogist and traditional hula expert
- Leroy A. Mendonca (1932-1951) U.S. Army sergeant killed in combat during Korean War, Medal of Honor
- Alice Sae Teshima Noda (1894-1964) - entrepreneur
- Frederick Pang (1954), U.S. Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Manpower and Reserve Affairs), 1993–94
- Paul Schrier (1985), actor[12]
- Alfred Song (1936), California State Assemblyman and State Senator
- John Chin Young (1909–1997), artist
Galería de arquitectura
The architect most involved in the early layout of the King Street campus and design of its Spanish Colonial Revival buildings was Louis E. Davis. The original quadrangle was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.[13]
Statue and main administration building
Commercial building (B), with NRHP and Hiram Fong plaques
Art building (D), with owl columns
Walkway to Beckwith Hall (E)
Miles E. Cary Circle doorway to Beckwith Hall (E)
Miles E. Cary Circle doorway to Commercial building (B)
Doorway to Home Economics building (C)
Main administration building end wing
Referencias
- Hawaii State Department of Education (n.d.). School Status and Improvement Report (School Year 2001-2002): President William McKinley High School. Retrieved June 16, 2004, from State of Hawaii Department of Education, Accountability Resource Center Hawaii Web site: http://arch.k12.hi.us/school/ssir/2002/honolulu.html
- Sakamoto, Dean, Vladimir Ossipoff, Karla Britton, Kenneth Frampton, Diana Murphy (2008). Hawaiian Modern: The Architecture of Vladimir Ossipoff. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-12146-6, ISBN 978-0-300-12146-9
- U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics (n.d.). Common Core of Data (CCD) 2001-2002 School Year: McKinley High School. Retrieved on June 16, 2004, from http://nces.ed.gov/ccd/schoolsearch/school_detail.asp?Search=1&SchoolID=150003000193&ID=150003000193
Notas
- ^ a b c President William McKinley High School
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- ^ "McKinley High School to celebrate 150 years of Black & Gold tradition". Hawaii State Department of Education. 21 September 2015. Retrieved 24 June 2020.
- ^ "McKinley To Give Diplomas To 1,288 Graduates". The Honolulu Advertiser. via Newspapers.com. 28 May 1938. Retrieved 24 June 2020.
- ^ News Center: BYU-Idaho History: The Spirit of Ricks
- ^ Celebrating A Century of Ricks Athletics
- ^ "Mckinley Softball Stadium Environmental Assessment Under Review". Archived from the original on 29 June 2012. Retrieved 8 February 2012.
- ^ "Major upgrade plans for McKinley High School". Hawaii News Now. Retrieved 8 February 2012.
- ^ "McKinley's bold facilities plan has already hit snags". Pacific Business News. Retrieved 8 February 2012.
- ^ V., Billy (2015-09-09). "Award-winning Kumu Hula Leinaala Kalama Heine dies at 75". Honolulu Star-Advertiser. Retrieved 2015-10-02.
- ^ Morse, Marcia, "Inner World, Outer World: The Art of Keichi and Sueko Kimura", Honolulu Academy of Arts, 2001, p. 11
- ^ [1]
- ^ Sakamoto et al. (2008), p. 47
enlaces externos
- McKinley High School (school Web site)
- McKinley High School (Hawaii State Department of Education Web site)
- McKinley High School Robotics Team
- Hawaii State Department of Education
- Official Alumni Community Site