Category: Campus News

What Trump’s Executive Orders Mean For College Students

There is collective uncertainty about the future of higher education. University of Hawai‘i President Wendy Hensel, who oversees UH Mānoa and all community colleges, said she has been working closely with Hawaiʻi Congress, Gov. Josh Green’s office and the state attorney general to navigate these confusing and constantly evolving times in order to act in compliance with the law while still maintaining the UH’s core values.

Read More

Culinary Students Assist Culinary Icons at Annual Food Festival

The Hawaiʻi Food & Wine Festival is not only for food and wine loving patrons, it is a time of gathering for industry professionals to reconnect and celebrate each other’s work. More than that, it is an opportunity for culinary students around Hawaiʻi to meet, and work alongside, some of the world’s most revered chefs, offering them an entryway into the next phase of their careers. 

Read More

Affording College: How HINET Can Help

It took several years for Tumbaga, now 31, to return to KCC after leaving the first time. He had to save money to pay for school. Even after the nursing program began – it took him two attempts to get in – he struggled financially. That’s when a fellow classmate told Tumbaga about HINET.

Read More
Loading

Poll

Are you worried about the Trump administration's cuts to the Department of Education?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...

Voices & Views

  • James SprayJames Spray
    James Spray is a second-year student ready to graduate from KCC this May. Majoring in Liberal Arts, Spray is looking to attend Arizona State University (ASU) to major in Technical Theatre. He said that going into the theater tech field while at ASU would be like having a job as a carpenter, where he would learn set design and drafting, which connects to his interest of building and creating products. Spray hopes to also play volleyball while at ASU. Spray shared that his major originally was Kinesiology, however, after taking a theater class at KCC, he was convinced to get back into his passion for theater, recalling memories of fun times he had while taking theater classes for three years in high school. He has been working at the Kennedy Theatre and Chaminade University's theater departments as a project assistant. Being that Spray will be graduating this semester, he said that he will miss the professors and counselors the most because of how supportive and helpful they have been. Spray said that his teacher for an Introduction to Health and Wellness class that he took during his first semester at KCC was the most influential teacher that he has had. "The way he ran the classroom was so different. We were going outside to learn stuff, we were exercising," Spray said. "He was very knowledgeable, of course, and he shared a lot of his stories which really kind of connects the teacher to the student which is really nice." Spray said that the biggest obstacle that he's faced while in school was finding that drive to stay focused, especially when there are only a few weeks of the semester left. "I'm slowly going down in classes, and [I'm thinking] 'I just want this to be over', but in the back of my head I'm like 'I need to pass these classes'," Spray said. "So I would say finding drive in your lazy moments and finding motivation."

Archives

Staff Writers