Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Hawaiian Mission Academy

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Established
  
1920

Gender
  
Coeducational

Mascot
  
Knight

Number of students
  
117 (2011–2012)

Grades
  
K–12

Phone
  
+1 808-536-2207

Founded
  
1920

Hawaiian Mission Academy

Type
  
Private, Day and Boarding, College-prep

Motto
  
Mental · Spiritual · Physical

Denomination
  
Seventh-day Adventist Church

Address
  
1438 Pensacola St, Honolulu, HI 96822, USA

Accreditation
  
Western Association of Schools and Colleges

Athletics conference
  
Interscholastic League of Honolulu

Similar
  
Punahou School, Iolani School, Hawaii Baptist Academy, St Francis School, Damien Memorial School

Profiles

Lei day promo 2015 hawaiian mission academy


The Hawaiian Mission Academy (HMA) is a private coeducational day and boarding school in Honolulu, Hawaii. HMA is the only Academy that provides international dormitory housing on the island.It is a part of the Seventh-day Adventist education system, the world's second largest Christian school system.

Contents

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History

Educational work of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in the Hawaiian Islands started in 1895 with a boarding school for boys, under the leadership of H. H. Brand. This school was named the Anglo-Chinese Academy in 1897 when Professor and Mrs. W. E. Howell came to Honolulu to head it.

To accommodate expanding enrollment, several changes in location were made until Bethel Grammar, as it was known then, located on Keeaumoku Street, added secondary grades. Increased enrollment again called forlarger quarters. In 1920 several properties on Makiki Street became the site of a combined elementary and secondary school designed to accommodate all Hawaiian Seventh-day Adventists mission schools, adopting the name Hawaiian Mission Academy.

Enrollment peaked during World War II. In 1946, the estate of former Princess Abigail Campbell Kawānanakoa property on Pensacola Street, Royal Hawaiian land, became available as a site for a new secondary school. Construction began in summer 1949, and the secondary school and its administrative offices were moved to the campus in December, 1949. The elementary school remained at the Makiki Street campus.

HMA’s alumni include Mary Kawena Pukui, Labor Relations Board Judge David Pendleton, former governor John Waihe’e, and his wife Lynne Waihe’e, who serves as Chair of the Hawaiian Mission Academy Board of Trustees.

Description

Hawaiian Mission Academy is located 1438 Pensacola Street, 21°18′20″N 157°50′37″W, in Honolulu, Hawaii on the island of Oʻahu. It has grades 9-12 and continues its affiliation with the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It is a coeducational college preparatory private school with an average of 135 students and 14 faculty.

Activities

HMA offers three sports: basketball, volleyball, and golf. HMA has an active Rotary Interact club.

The Senior class goes to California for 10 days to visit Pacific Union College in Napa County, La Sierra University in Riverside, and Loma Linda University School of Medicine in San Bernardino County. The seniors also visit Disneyland, SeaWorld, and other places during their trip. HMA students go to Camp Erdman in Mokuleia, Hawaii. Hawaiian Mission Academy sets aside a fall week of prayer, student week of prayer (the week of Camp Erdman), and a spring week of prayer for spiritual reflection. A special chapel is held every day of the week.

Students

The ethnic background of students is: American Indian 1, Asian/Pacific Islander: 98, Hispanic: 8, African American: 6, and Caucasian: 20.

HMA has the equivalent of 14.4 teachers and 133 students for a student teacher ratio of 9.2:1.

Spiritual aspects

All students take religion classes each year that they are enrolled. These classes cover topics in biblical history and Christian and denominational doctrines. Instructors in other disciplines also begin each class period with prayer or a short devotional thought, many which encourage student input. Weekly, the entire student body gathers together in the auditorium for an hour-long chapel service. Outside the classrooms there is year-round spiritually oriented programming that relies on student involvement.

References

Hawaiian Mission Academy Wikipedia