Site Map Guest Book Contact Us About Us Resources Publications Projects Hawaii Kids Count Data Center Home Native Hawaiian Early Childhood Education Drug Prevention School and Community Profiles Child and Family Indicators Native Hawaiian Early Childhood Education Drug Prevention School and Community Profiles Child and Family Indicators
Center on the Family
General Navigation
Main Navigation
Data Center | Native Hawaiian Children and Families | State Factsheet

Native Hawaiian Children and Families
State Factsheet
Indicator Data
Publications and Agency Reports
Findings From Provider Survey
Findings From Consumer Survey
Family Touchstones: Strong Native Hawaiian Families
Report to Ho'owaiwai Na Kamali'i The Native Hawaiian Early Childhood Education and Care Consortium

 

PROFILE OF YOUNG HAWAIIAN CHILDREN

This report focuses on Hawaiian children ages 0-5, of which there are 15,500 in the state of Hawaii. Data for adults, older children, and youth are included as they influence the lives of these keiki.
 

HEALTH AND SAFETY

Early on, a child's development and potential are affected by accessibility to prenatal care and birth conditions. Later, environmental factors play a greater role in determining the health and safety of keiki. The health behaviors of others in the family are learned and the physical conditions of the home and family relationships strongly affect the keiki's safety.
 

INDICATOR

HAWAIIAN STATE
Births with early prenatal care 58.5% 83.4%
Children without health insurance 5.1% 5.4%
Low birth-weight babies 4.1% 7.3%
10th graders with regular cigarette use 21.4% 16.6%
10th graders with regular alcohol use 41.1% 32.4%
10th graders with regular marijuana use 27.9% 17.2%
8th graders reporting drug use in home 56.3% 48.9%
Teen birth rate (per 1,000 ages 15-17) 62.6 22.6
Child abuse and neglect rate 22.3 9.5
Homeless children (age 0-5) in shelters est. 350 1032
   
 

EDUCATION & CHILD CARE

Education is a lifelong process and when early experiences prepare children for the formal part of that process, they are most likely to be successful. School readiness is determined by the positive interaction among the child's developmental characteristics, school practices, and family and community support.
 

INDICATOR

HAWAIIAN STATE
3-year-olds with child care subsidies in center-based care 61.0% 75.0%*
3-year-olds with child care subsidies in kith and kin care 31.0% 25.0%*
Kindergarteners having preschool experience 41.3% 45.4%
Public school students scoring below average - reading SAT 29.0% 20.0%*
Public school students scoring below average - math SAT 26.0% 18.0%*
Students in Special Education programs (elementary) 15.0% 12.0%
Teens in GRADS program for DOE pregnant/parenting students 385 774
Note: *non-Hawaiian data  
   
 
FAMILY COMPOSITION & RELATIONS
The family is the most important resource for any child. Hawaiian families have many strengths, yet face many challenges. They place a higher value on family relationships and activities, but are often less stable and over-represented among the poor.
 

INDICATOR

HAWAIIAN STATE
Average family size 4.1 3.4
6th graders living 2 adults, at least one biological parent 67.3% 73.8%
Births that are to women under 18 years of age 4.9% 3.2%
First births as proportion of all births 27.2% 41.2%
Non-marital births 41.3% 32.3%
Births to mother with less than 12 years education 12.9% 10.7%
Children in free/reduced price lunch program* 67.4% 49.6%
Kids reporting parents unconcerned about anti-social behavior 28.0% 25.7%
Kids reporting poor family supervision 49.1% 48.0%
Kids reporting family conflict 46.8% 40.6%
Adults reporting family makes time to do things together 89.2% 87.8%
Number of times per week children see their grandparents 4.2 3.2
Families attend neighborhood celebrations and cultural events 61.8% 57.0%
* As a proxy indicator for the percentage of families with school age children
   
Home Data Center Hawaii Kids Count Projects Publications Resources About Us


Center on the Family
College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources · University of Hawai`i at Manoa
2515 Campus Road, Miller Hall 103 · Honolulu, HI 96822
Phone: (808) 956-4132 · Fax: (808) 956-4147 · E-mail: cof@ctahr.hawaii.edu

University of hawaii at Manoa