Mana‘o on KS Trustee Finalists 2025
Trustee selection at Kamehameha Schools carries long-term implications for education, ʻāina stewardship, and the well-being of our lāhui. These decisions shape not only institutional governance, but the conditions in which future generations of learners, families, and communities will thrive.
Kuleana to Engage
Following the announcement of trustee finalists, Kanaeokana participants were surveyed to determine whether and how the network should engage in the public comment process. Participants overwhelmingly expressed that Kanaeokana should facilitate a collective opportunity to submit manaʻo on the trustee finalists on behalf of the network.
Our educators, cultural practitioners, and organizational leaders who are actively engaged in Hawaiian education and lāhui work shared that, given the multigenerational kuleana held by Ke Kula ‘o Kamehameha trustees, it was important for perspectives rooted in practice, community, and ʻŌiwi leadership to be gathered and conveyed in a coordinated and thoughtful way.
Designing a Process Rooted in Kuleana
Guided by participant direction and constrained by a compressed public comment timeline, a structured process to gather and synthesize feedback on the trustee finalists was designed and implemented.
The public posting of finalists and subsequent notification of the Trustee Screening Committee’s selections resulted in a public comment window of less than one month. Within this timeframe, Kanaeokana opened a member comment process from December 4 through December 20, allowing time for participation, synthesis, and submission ahead of the Court’s deadline.
To support informed and meaningful manaʻo, we:
- Convened a publicly accessible candidate forum, allowing participants to hear directly from trustee finalists and better understand their perspectives.
- Developed a structured survey instrument grounded in:
- Kamehameha Schools Strategic Plan 2030
- Kanaeokana’s Palapala ʻŌnaehana Hoʻonaʻauao Hawaiʻi
- Community-informed criteria reflecting ea, ʻōiwi leadership, aloha ʻāina, and connection to community
- Collected both quantitative and qualitative input
- Synthesized responses at the network level, focusing on patterns and themes rather than individual endorsements or isolated opinions.
What Emerged from the Collective Manaʻo
Across responses, Kanaeokana participants expressed a consistent and important understanding of trustee leadership.
Participants rejected the notion that cultural grounding and fiscal, economic, or technical competence are competing or mutually exclusive qualities. Instead, the collective manaʻo affirmed that these dimensions of leadership must be integrated, with cultural grounding and worldview providing the frame through which professional skills and expertise are exercised.
From this perspective, fiscal and technical competence are essential but not value neutral. How those competencies are applied depends on the worldview guiding decision making: how risks are assessed, how tradeoffs are weighed, and how long-term impacts on learners, communities, and ʻāina are understood. At stake is not only institutional performance, but our collective ability to assert control over our own possibilities as a lāhui.
Participants also emphasized continuity. While Strategic Plan 2030 is often described as a five-year framework, many viewed it as part of a longer generational trajectory shaped through multiple plans, leadership cycles, and evolving practice. From this view, the incoming trustee is not entering to redefine direction, but to align with, steward, and advance existing momentum grounded in Pauahi’s intent.
What Kanaeokana Shared and Submitted
Kanaeokana compiled and submitted a collective manaʻo document to the Trustee Screening Committee and the Court that:
- Contextualized participant input within Strategic Plan 2030 and KS’s Theory of Change
- Reflected how Kanaeokana participants understand trustee kuleana in practice
- Lifted up areas of alignment, strength, and concern across key leadership dimensions
- Offered insight to support informed, equitable decision-making
Carrying This Work Forward
Kanaeokana remains committed to supporting processes that activate ea, and grow ʻŌiwi leadership, both within Ke Kula ‘o Kamehameha and across the broader movement for a thriving, self-determined lāhui. This work is part of an ongoing commitment of our participants, our learners, and the communities we serve.
Rooted in kuana ʻike Hawaiʻi, ea, kuleana, and community voice, including an understanding of fiscal and fiduciary responsibility, this document reflects how our network engaged, what emerged, and what it means for leadership at a critical moment. Read the full submission








