Tacoma School of The Arts

The Tacoma School of the Arts (SOTA or TSOTA) is the only arts school in the greater Tacoma, Washington area. SOTA historically only housed grades 10 through 12, but beginning in the 2012 school year, it began admit students in the 9th grade as well. SOTA's student capacity is around 500 students. SOTA was established in the fall of 2001, with help from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Classes are housed in multiple venues across downtown Tacoma, in buildings that have historically served many purposes—including a department store, a music store, and a dance studio. SOTA is a "rigorous, interdisciplinary, urban arts education."

SOTA is known for its rigorous arts and academic programs, and students are welcome to take classes at Tacoma's Science and Math Institute at Point Defiance part. SOTA and SAMi also offer University of Washington Credits through multiple classes. Interdisciplinary study between the arts and academics are a strong focus at SOTA. Students are presented with multiple opportunities to travel, including service and study tours, as well as internships and volunteer opportunities. The school runs seamlessly in the community taking classes in multiple venues.

SOTA was one of three Washington state school winners of the inaugural state Schools of Excellence in Arts Education Award, part of the national program of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts Schools of Distinction in Arts Education Awards. Shortly after, SOTA was one of only four schools in the inaugural year to win at the national level.

Read more about Tacoma School Of The Arts:  Students, Admissions Process, Daily Life & Academics, Advisory and Life After, Student Opportunities, Notable Alumni, Notable Faculty, In Popular Culture, Sister Schools

Famous quotes containing the words school and/or arts:

    Dissonance between family and school, therefore, is not only inevitable in a changing society; it also helps to make children more malleable and responsive to a changing world. By the same token, one could say that absolute homogeneity between family and school would reflect a static, authoritarian society and discourage creative, adaptive development in children.
    Sara Lawrence Lightfoot (20th century)

    So long as the system of competition in the production and exchange of the means of life goes on, the degradation of the arts will go on; and if that system is to last for ever, then art is doomed, and will surely die; that is to say, civilization will die.
    William Morris (1834–1896)