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Charleston County School of the Arts

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Charleston County School of the Arts
Address
Map
1600 Saranac St.

,
Information
TypeMagnet/ Art
Established1995
OversightCharleston County School District
PrincipalJames Reinhart
Grades6–12
Enrollmentapprox 1,000
CampusSuburban
Phone(843) 529-4990
Websitesoa.ccsdschools.com

hello people in dr. balls advisery Charleston County School of the Arts (commonly abbreviated SOA) is a public magnet school located in North Charleston, South Carolina in the United States. The school was started in 1995 by Rose Maree Myers and serves over 1,000 students in grades 6 through 12. Admission to SOA is based upon a competitive audition process in one of eight majors: Creative Writing, Dance, Instrumental Band, Strings Orchestra, Piano, Theatre Arts, Visual Arts, and Vocal Music.

Currently, the school has the fifth-highest SAT scores in the state. The school's Advanced Placement scores are the highest in the school district for those schools where 15% or more of the students are enrolled in AP courses. Students may select from AP Calculus, AP English Literature, AP Music Theory, AP Statistics, AP Studio Art, AP U.S. History, and AP World History. Seventy-five percent of enrolled students score 3, 4, or 5 each year on the AP exams. Students in the 2004-2005 AP Music Theory class had the highest AP scores in the world for schools of SOA's size. The first SOA graduating class (2001) scored a 100% passing rate on the AP English Literature exam for those students who took AP English, and SOA has continued to maintain a 92% passing rate in English through 2007.

The Chorale has sung at Carnegie Hall. More creative writing students win the annual Scholastic Writing Award than students in any other program in the nation. Two students, Sara Saylor and Jessica Atkinson, have won Scholastic's grand prize (Jessica subsequently received endowments from such prominent figures as Chuck Palahniuk). And, in 2008, three of the ten 8th grade creative writers won the national Scholastic award.

Some students attend the most selective arts colleges upon graduation including Juilliard, the Eastman School of Music, the Manhattan School of Music, the New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music, the Rhode Island School of Design, the Savannah College of Art and Design, and many of the most prestigious academic universities. Many remain in Charleston, too, and elsewhere in South Carolina.

The School of the Arts is growing fast - and outgrowing the space it currently occupies. The building itself is said to have originally been a military facility, built around the forties. It served several other schools before it became the home of SOA. Evidence of previous purposes is visible everywhere: the school's band classroom and its Black Box Theater were both converted from garages whose doors now serve as walls; there is a sign that says LAUNDRY next to the middle school Visual Arts room; and all but one of the entrances into the main building can facilitate only single doors, making it somewhat difficult to maneuver in and out between classes.

Controversy was stirred in the spring of 2007 when Rose Maree Myers, the school's founder, who had served as principal since the school's inception in 1995, was abruptly transferred by district administration to an advisory position based in the district headquarters. Many students, teachers and parents were outraged at the district's decision, which was carried out with a month or so remaining in the school year. Some people spoke before the Charleston County School Board in support of Ms. Myers. The district did not reconsider, however, and an interim principal was put in place to finish the year. The interim principal Myrna Caldwell, assumed authority until June 2008, and previously taught 8th grade language arts at SOA and was assistant principal before taking her present position. The district recently appointed principal James Reinhart in July 2008, and has started construction on a new state-of-the-art facility named "Center for the Arts and Academics" to house both the School of the Arts and the Academic Magnet High School with partial completion expected in December of 2009.