University of Hawai'i System | Maui Community College

History

Maui Community College serves the educational needs of residents of the
three islands comprising Maui County: Molokai, Lana'i, and Maui.

The College is an outgrowth of the Maui Vocational School established in
1931. In 1958 the Department of Public Instruction authorized the name
change to Maui Technical School, denoting an upgrade of vocational
education to a technical level. In 1964, the Hawai'i State Legislature
enacted the Community College Act establishing a statewide community
college system under the University of Hawai'i. Maui Technical School
was incorporated into this system on July 1, 1965, and transferred from
jurisdiction of the Department of Education to the University of
Hawai'i.

In 1966, the Board of Regents of the University of Hawai'i authorized
the College to confer the Associate in Arts and the Associate in Science
degrees and approved the name change to Maui Community College,
effective July 1, 1966. In September 1967, the first lower division
transfer courses were offered. Maui Community College is one of seven
community colleges in the University of Hawai'i System and part of a ten
campus University of Hawai'i System.

MCC networked faculty to terminals connected to a DEC VAX Computer and
established the first higher education cable television channel
delivering instruction to its tri-isle service area in 1983. By 1988,
the college constructed a tri-isle interactive television system and
completed its Ka'a'ike Instructional Telecommunications facility housing
its television and audio studios, digital media and electronic and
computer engineering technology labs, and seven interactive tv
classrooms. The college additionally began a National Center of
Excellence for High Performance Computing applying personal computer
cluster solutions to problems requiring high speed processing.

In Fall 2003, MCC opened its culinary arts facility and began it Maui
Oral Health Center in Kahului. In the summer of 2005, the World Hula
Conference and, in summer of 2006, the IX Islands of the World
Conference will be held on campus and on Maui.

Apartment style housing is available for Maui County students who are
not within commuting distance to the Kahului campus. Since 1995 five new
classroom and computer lab supporting buildings have been added to the
campus: Ka Lama, Ka'a'ike, Kupa'a, Laulima, and Pa'ina. A new 400-bed
student housing project is planned for opening in 2006.

The College encompasses 78 acres at the Kahului site. The student
population numbered about 3,000 students in Fall 2004.

 

 

 

The following table holds navigation links for the Maui Community College Web site. The top of each column describes a category of links in the cell below it.

Aloha Admission Academics Maui Living About MCC Inside MCC Portals

Home page

MyUH Portal

Making Waves

Overview

International

Mainland U.S.

Overview

MCC Programs

Centers & Institutes

College Catalog

Schedule of Classes

Library

 

Overview

People

Surfing

Arts & Culture

Windsurfing

Kite Boarding

Hiking

Camping

Overview

Mission

History

 

Overview

Campus Services

Organizations

Current Students

Faculty & Staff

Alumni & Friends

 


Maui Community College - 310 W. Ka'ahumanu Avenue- Kahului, HI 96732-1617 - (808) 984-3500

Maui Community College does not discriminate on the basis of race, sex, age, religion, color, national origin,
ancestry, disability, marital status, arrest and court records, sexual orientation, or status as a covered veteran