It has a boarding program for students from distant atolls and islands.[2]
History
The first phase of the campus was built between the late 1960s to the middle of the 1970s, a period when several other public high schools were built in the
Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands.[3]
The school, the second public high school in the Marshall Islands, opened in 1975.[4] The South Korean company Hanil built the campus. Initially it served grade 9 only and had 110 students.[5]
In 1999 the Marshall Islands Journal published comments from a parent who criticized the dormitories of Jaluit High.[6]
^Compact of Free Association in the Micronesian States of Palau, the Federated States of Micronesia and the Marshall Islands: Environmental Impact Statement.
United States Department of State, 1984. p.
36.
^Highlights. Office of the High Commissioner,
Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, 1975. p.
2. "The opening of the newly-constructed Jaluit High School is tentatively scheduled for October 20, 1975. Built by the Hanil Construction Company of South Korea, the new Jaluit High School will be the second public high school built in the Marshalls. [...] Andrike said that the new Jaluit High School will open October 20 with an enrollment of 110 students. Opening with only ninth grade this year, the .."
^"
Back In The Day Capital building cracks." The Marshall Islands Journal. Retrieved on December 25, 2015. "P1 Dorms a hellhole Majuro’s block cell jail — which is not noted for its amenities — provides better accommodations than Jaluit High School’s student dormitory, according to a parent of a JHS student."