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Kamehameha Schools Kapalama names new Head of School

November 10, 2011

Contributed by Thomas Yoshida

"I am pleased to announce that Earl Kim has accepted my invitation to join the Kamehameha Schools 'ohana as our new Po'o Kula – Head of School – for the Kapālama campus," said CEO Dee Jay Mailer. "Earl will follow the path that Dr. Chun and the Kapālama 'ohana have set in assuring educational excellence on a strong foundation of our Hawaiian ancestry, culture and language. He would be the first to say he will learn from the best, subordinating the fact that he was selected because of his strong sense of values and purpose and his proven success in building educational excellence and character in the students he has served and in the communities in which he has served."

He is currently Superintendent of Schools for the Montgomery school district of New Jersey, which serves 5,300 preK-12 students a year. He will become Kapālama's Head of School on July 1, 2012, succeeding Michael J. Chun, Ph.D., who earlier this year announced his intent to retire, effective June 30, 2012.

"Overwhelmed and deeply humbled," Kim said, describing his reaction to being selected. "I have always known that this is what I was supposed to do with my adult life. This is something deeper than just taking responsibility for a school. It is taking responsibility for continuing the good work of Dr. Chun and the others who came before him, and for advancing the values and vision of Princess Pauahi on behalf of our children. This is stewardship of something sacred, and I can think of no higher purpose in life."

Selection Process
Born and raised in Hawai'i, the 1980 'Iolani School graduate was selected from a field of over 150 individuals nominated and recruited from throughout Hawai'i and the nation. He was among six semi-finalists interviewed, and three finalists who visited the campus in October and were interviewed by six review committees comprised of Kapālama faculty, students, alumni, parents, administrators and community members. These committees provided feedback on each candidate against criteria that included:

  • Strong educational leadership that can build on the academic strengths of the Kapālama faculty and staff,
  • Strong personal values that align with the school's Hawaiian ancestry and spirituality.
  • Ability to lead the school in its journey to learn, practice, live, share and perpetuate its Hawaiian heritage, culture and values.
  • Proven skills in managing a large, complex organization.
  • Experience in connecting and serving diverse communities.

After reviewing the feedback from the different stakeholder committees and consulting with the trustees, the final decision to appoint Mr. Kim as Po'o Kula was made by CEO Mailer.

"In my meetings and conversations with Earl, and through my review of his experience and references, I find a man who brings impressive experience and achievement in leading and managing large educational systems to excellence," said CEO Mailer. "Equally telling are the comments that came from our interviewing committees on his abilities and character. They describe a 'passion for developing each student's excellence; a passion for building each teacher's excellence; collaborative; empowering; evidence and results orientation; a humble learner with high integrity and spirituality.'"

Keiki o ka 'āina
Earl Kim is the youngest of three children who remembers moving around a lot as a youngster on O'ahu, living for a while in Kāne'ohe before the family moved to Pālolo so his parents could be closer to work and he and his siblings could be closer to school.

"Home was a hard place to be, at times, so I ended up spending a lot of time at school," Kim shared. "Some mornings I would get dropped off at five o'clock and be there until after eight at night. But I felt safe there. I just remember so many people looking after me and caring about how I was doing, and that's the environment I want at every school I am a part of – a safe, caring, nurturing place for children."

After graduating from 'Iolani, he attended Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, on a Navy ROTC scholarship. He graduated in 1984 with a BA in History, and then entered the U.S Marine Corps as a 2nd Lieutenant. He was discharged honorably in 1988 and accepted a teaching position (Math) at Trenton Central High School in Trenton, NJ.

He earned a Masters in Public Affairs, Domestic Policy Analysis from Princeton University in 1993, and served as Assistant Principal and Principal at two New Jersey high schools between 1993 and 2003. He was named District Superintendent of Schools for Verona Township in 2003 and then for the Montgomery school district in 2006.

"I left the islands at 17 and began to collect my thoughts about what my purpose in life was to be," Kim said. "I travelled the United States, Western Pacific, Europe and Asia to gain perspective on our place in the world. I had the good fortune of studying at great universities with wonderful teachers and fellow sojourners. I am eager now to apply my learning in the service of the people and the islands that I call home. I can think of no nobler pursuit, no better use for my education and experience. Our keiki deserve no less."

Kim and his wife, Kit, who is also an educator and who has taught in Hawai'i, have two children, ages 14 and 18.

Kamehameha Schools is a private, educational, charitable trust founded and endowed by the legacy of Princess Bernice Pauahi Bishop. Kamehameha Schools operates a statewide educational system enrolling nearly 6,900 students of Hawaiian ancestry at K-12 campuses on O'ahu, Maui and Hawai'i and 31 preschool sites statewide. Approximately 37,500 additional Hawaiian learners and caregivers are served each year through a range of other Kamehameha Schools' outreach programs, community collaborations and financial aid opportunities in Hawai'i and across the continental United States.

Media contacts: Elizabeth Ahana, (808) 534-3872; elahana@ksbe.edu
Kekoa Paulsen, (808) 523-6369; kepaulse@ksbe.edu

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